Indian Steel Titan’s Coal Deal Frozen Amid Mozambique Legal Row

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India’s largest steelmaker has been sidelined by a legal dispute that’s derailed its deal to buy a coal concession in Mozambique.

JSW Steel Ltd. — run by Sajjan Jindal — agreed in May to buy Minas de Revuboè from the estate of Ken Talbot, an Australian mining tycoon who died 14 years ago. Before the deal could be completed, the Mozambican government revoked MdR’s lease to mine coal valued at about $50 billion.

In August, two months after the license was withdrawn from MdR, the Ministry of Mineral Resources and Energy published a notice in Mozambique’s state-owned newspaper offering a 30-day window for any objections to the concession being awarded to Stonecoal SA. Four of Stonecoal’s five directors are employed at Jindal Steel & Power Ltd., a company headed by Naveen Jindal, Sajjan’s younger brother.

The loss of the rights has triggered a legal battle between MdR and Mozambique’s government, leaving JSW as an observer. It comes at a critical time for the country, after disputed elections last October triggered demonstrations in which at least 278 people have died. That will test Daniel Chapo — due to be inaugurated as president on Jan. 15 — who has prioritized stability for international investors.

Both JSW Steel and JSPL are part of the late OP Jindal’s $35 billion Mumbai-based empire, which was divided among his four sons and is overseen by his widow Savitri, India’s richest woman. The brothers occasionally have small cross-holdings in each others’ companies, but they are run separately and even occasionally compete against each other.

Sajjan’s JSW first agreed to acquire MdR in November 2023, according to a spokesperson for the Talbot estate, and in May announced a final deal under which it agreed to pay $74 million for a 92% stake. That’s a fraction of the $555 million that 12 years earlier Anglo American Plc said it would pay for a 58.9% stake in the same coal project. The London-based mining giant walked away from the transaction eight months later.

Naveen chairs a private business called Vulcan International that owns Mozambique’s largest coal mine at Moatize, which lies adjacent to the concession stripped from MdR. The younger Jindal brother — now a lawmaker with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party — acquired the asset three years ago in a $270 million deal with Brazil’s Vale SA.