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Lakshmi Niwas Mittal
born 15
June 1950) is an
Indian
steel tycoon and the
chairman
and
chief executive officer
of
ArcelorMittal.
As of July 2010, Mittal is the richest man in
Europe[2]
and the
fifth richest in the
world
with a personal wealth of
US$28.7 billion or £19.3 billion.[2]
The
Financial Times named
Mittal Person of the Year in 2006. In May 2007, he
was named one of the "100 Most Influential People"
by
Time magazine.
He serves as a non-executive director of
Goldman Sachs,
EADS and
ICICI Bank[9]
and is presently the vice chairman of the
World Steel Association.
Mittal is a member of the Foreign Investment Council
in Kazakhstan, the International Investment Council
in South Africa, the World Economic Forum’s
International Business Council and the International
Iron and Steel Institute’s Executive Committee.[10]
He is a member in the Advisory Board of the
Kellogg School of
Management
and is part of
St.
Xavier's College, Calcutta Alumni Association, London Chapter.
Early life
He was born in
Sadulpur village, in the
Churu
district of
Rajasthan,
India.
Lakshmi Nivas Mittal was born into a business family
of Rajasthan. He comes from a wealthy Indian steel
family - his father, Mohan Lal Mittal, ran a steel
business, Nippon Denro Ispat. Until the 1990s, the
family's main assets in India were a cold-rolling
mill for sheet steels in Nagpur and an alloy steels
plant near Pune. Today, the family business,
including a large integrated steel plant near
Mumbai, is run by Lakshmi's brothers, Pramod and
Vinod, but Lakshmi has no connection with it.[11]
Mittal started his career working in the family's
steelmaking business in India, and in 1976, when the
family founded its own steel business, he set out to
establish its international division, beginning with
the buying of a run-down plant in Indonesia. Shortly
afterwards he married Usha, the daughter of a
well-to-do moneylender. In 1976, due to differences
with his father, mother and brothers, he branched
out on his the LNM Group, and he has been
responsible for the development of its businesses
ever since. Mittal Steel is a global steel producer
with operations in 14 countries.
Mittal pioneered the development of integrated
mini-mills and the use of direct reduced iron or "DRI"
as a scrap substitute for steelmaking and led the
consolidation process of the global steel industry.
Mittal Steel is the largest steelmaker in the world,
with shipments of 42.1 million tons of steel and
profits of over $22 billion in 2004.
Mittal was awarded Fortune magazine's
"European Businessman of the Year 2004" and also
"Steelmaker of the Year" in 1996 by New Steel, and
the "Willy Korf Steel Vision Award" in 1998, for
outstanding vision, entrepreneurship, leadership and
success in global steel development from Metal
Market and PaineWeber’s World Steel Dynamics. In
2002, he was involved in a political scandal with
British Prime Minister Tony Blair, when a donation
he made to the Labour party led to Blair's
intervention in a business deal favoring Mittal. It
was announced later that he donated £2 million to
the Labour Party.Also conducting charitable activity
at his home town'
Family
Lakshmi Mittal's father is Mohan Lal Mittal and his
brother is Pramod.
London 2012 Olympics and Paralympic Games
ArcelorMittal, led by Chairman and CEO Lakshmi
Mittal, will fund £16 million of the £19.1 million
project, with the outstanding £3.1 million provided
by the London Development Agency. As such, the
sculpture not only represents a significant cultural
investment - the largest single artwork ever
commissioned for any Olympiad - but will also make a
significant financial contribution to the long-term
regeneration of East London.[12]
The
ArcelorMittal Orbit, the
largest artistic commission in the world, will
harness state-of-the-art engineering and
architectural techniques. Constructed with steel
provided by ArcelorMittal, the sculpture will
consist of a continuous looping lattice of tubular
steel and offer unparalleled view of the entire
Olympic Park and London's skyline from a special
viewing platform.[12]
Personal and growing wealth
In 2010, Forbes magazine listed Mittal the world's
fifth richest person with personal wealth of
US$28.7
billion. His wealth has grown by over
US$9
billion compared to 2009 and is up 3 places in the
Forbes ranking.[2]
In 2009, Forbes magazine listed Mittal the world's
eighth richest person with personal wealth of
US$19.3
billion.[2]
In 2008, Mittal was reported to be the fourth
wealthiest person in the world, and the wealthiest
in
Asia, by
Forbes Magazine (up from 61st richest in 2004) up one place since a year
before. The Mittal family owns a controlling
majority stake in
ArcelorMittal,
the world's largest steel company.[13]
Causes and charity
After witnessing India win only one medal,
bronze,
in the
2000 Summer Olympics, and one
medal,
silver,
at the
2004 Summer Olympics, Mittal
decided to set up
Mittal Champions Trust with
US$9 million to support 10 Indian athletes with
world-beating potential.[14]
In 2008, Mittal awarded
Abhinav Bindra with Rs. 1.5 Crore (Rs. 15 million), for getting
India
its first individual
Olympic gold medal in
shooting.
For
Comic Relief
2007, he matched the money raised (~£1 million) on the celebrity
special BBC programme,
The Apprentice.
ArcelorMittal also has a very active CSR program
under which it sets out its path to produce Safe
Sustainable Steel. The company also operates the
ArcelorMittal Foundation, which provides support to
many different community projects around the world
in the countries where ArcelorMittal operates.
Criticism and allegations
Lakshmi Mittal successfully employed
Marek Dochnal's consultancy to influence Polish officials in the
privatization of PHS steel group, which was Poland's
largest. Dochnal was later arrested for bribing
Polish officials on behalf of Russian agents in a
separate affair.[15]
In 2007, Polish government said it wants to
renegotiate the 2004 sale to Arcelor Mittal.[16]
Slave-labour allegations
Employees of Mittal have accused him of "slave
labour" conditions after multiple fatalities in his
mines.[17]
During December 2004, twenty-three miners died in
explosions in his mines in
Kazakhstan
caused by faulty gas detectors.
The Mittal Affair: "Cash for Influence"
Controversy erupted in 2002 as
Plaid
MP
Adam Price exposed
the link between UK prime minister
Tony Blair and
Mittal in the
Mittal Affair, also known as 'Garbagegate' or Cash for Influence.[18][19][20]
Mittal's
LNM
steel company, registered in the
Dutch Antilles and maintaining less than 1% of its 100,000 plus workforce in
the UK, sought Blair's aid in its bid to purchase
Romania's
state steel industry.[20]
The letter from Blair to the Romanian government, a
copy of which Price was able to obtain, hinted that
the privatisation of the firm and sale to Mittal
might help smooth the way for Romania's entry into
the
European Union.[18]
The letter had a passage in it removed just prior to
Blair's signing of it, describing Mittal as "a
friend."[21]
Queens Park Rangers
Recently, Mittal had emerged as a leading contender
to buy and sell
Barclays Premiership clubs
Wigan and
Everton.
However on 20 December 2007 it was announced that
the Mittal family had purchased a 20 per cent
shareholding in
Queens Park Rangers
football club
joining
Flavio Briatore and
Mittal's friend
Bernie Ecclestone.[22]
As part of the investment Mittal's son-in-law, Amit
Bhatia, took a place on the board of directors. The
combined investment in the struggling club sparked
suggestions that Mittal might be looking to join the
growing ranks of wealthy individuals investing
heavily in English football and emulating other
similar benefactors such as
Roman Abramovich.[23]
On 19 February 2010,
Flavio Briatore resigned
as QPR chairman, and sold further shares in the club
to Mittal, making Mittal the single largest
shareholder.[24]
Environmental damage
Mittal purchased the Irish Steel plant based in Cork
from the government for a nominal fee of £1. Three
years later in 2001, it was closed, leaving 400
people redundant. Subsequent environmental issues at
the site have been a cause for criticism. The
Government tried to sue in the High Court to have
him pay for the clean-up of Cork Harbour but failed.
The clean up was expected to cost €70m.[25]
Personal life
He presently lives in
Kensington,
London.
His residence at 18-19
Kensington Palace
Gardens
which was purchased from
Formula One boss
Bernie Ecclestone in 2004 for £57 million (US$128 million), making it the
world's most expensive house at the time.[26]
Mittal's house in
Kensington,
London
is decorated with marble taken from the same
quarry
that supplied the
Taj Mahal. The extravagant
show of wealth has been referred to as the "Taj
Mittal".[27]
It has 12 bedrooms, an indoor pool, Turkish baths
and parking for 20 cars.[28]
Mittal bought No.6 Palace Greens, Gardens, formerly
owned by financier
Noam Gottesman, at £117 million for his son
Aditya Mittal.
Mittal bought No.9a Palace Greens, Kensington
Gardens, formerly the Filipino embassy, at £70
million in 2008 for his daughter Vanisha Mittal
Bhatia.
Mittal owns three prime properties collectively
worth £500 million on the "Billionaire's Row" at
Kensington Palace Gardens.
Mittal also owns a house called Summer Palace at
46B,
The Bishops Avenue, which
is dubbed as "Millionares Row" and is reportedly for
sale at £40 million.
In 2005, he also bought a colonial bungalow for $7.5
million at No.22,
Aurangzeb Road in New Delhi, India, the most exclusive street in the city
occupied by embassies and millionaires, and rebuilt
it as a house.
Honors and awards
-
2008 : Mr. Mittal has been a director of Goldman
Sachs since June 2008.
-
2007: He was awarded
Padma Vibhushan 'second in the
hierarchy of civilian awards' by the
President of India.[29]
-
2007: He was awarded Dwight D. Eisenhower Global
Leadership Award, Grand Cross of Civil Merit
from Spain and "Fellowship from King's College".[29]
-
2006: He was awarded International Newsmaker of
the year by Time Magazine and the "Person
of the year 2006" by Financial Times.
-
2004: He was awarded by Fortune magazine
- European Businessman of the Year.
-
1998: Willy Korf Steel Vision Award -
American Metal Market and PaineWeber’s
World Steel Dynamics
-
1996: Steelmaker of the Year - New Steel
-
2010: "Dostyk" 1, the highest civilian award of
Kazakhstan for his contribution to the
development of Republic of Kazakhstan
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