Electrode production at the Chelyabinsk plant will be closed on March 1 – Kommersant

Electrode production at the Chelyabinsk plant will be closed on March 1 - Kommersant

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The Chelyabinsk Electrometallurgical Plant (CHEMK) began stopping electrode production on behalf of President Vladimir Putin, said Chelyabinsk Region Governor Alexey Teksler. It will be completely closed on March 1.

Chelyabinsk Electrometallurgical Plant is the largest producer of ferroalloys in Russia (80% of the market). Owned by JSC “Company “Etalon”” Yuri and Lyudmila Antipov.

“We will definitely take care of the employees. They will be in demand in the remaining divisions of ChEMK. If necessary, we will help with employment at other enterprises,” Mr. Texler wrote in Telegram channel.

According to the governor, the authorities have also begun preparations to move ChEMK’s ferroalloy production outside the city. “In fact, it will be necessary to design and build a new, environmentally friendly and safe production facility outside the city. This work will take time,” said Alexey Teksler.

On February 16, at a meeting with Vladimir Putin, Mr. Teksler reminded, that in 2019 an agreement was signed according to which emissions during the production of the plant were to be reduced. However, according to the governor, the agreement was never fully implemented. At the meeting, Vladimir Putin instructed to move production from the city center. He clarified that social facilities from the balance sheet of the enterprise will be transferred to the ownership of the Chelyabinsk region.

Shortly before this, as Kommersant reported, the Prosecutor General’s Office filed a claim with the Arbitration Court of the Sverdlovsk Region in order to return to the state three enterprises of the industrial group of the Chelyabinsk Electrometallurgical Plant. According to the supervisory authority, the privatization carried out in the 1990s was illegal. A preliminary hearing on the lawsuit took place on February 19.

Read more about the trial in the Kommersant article. “Yesterday yours, and now ours”.

Lusine Balasyan

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