Venezuela’s Chavez nationalizes local steel company

CARACAS,  (Reuters) – Venezuela’s President Hugo  Chavez ordered the nationalization of local steel company  Sidetur yesterday in the latest of a several recent government  takeovers in South America’s top oil producer.

Sidetur, a subsidiary of local steel company Sivensa,  produces mainly rebar, bar, beam, angle and flat products.  According to its website (www.sidetur.com.ve), it has six  plants in Venezuela, an annual production capacity of more than  835,000 tonnes and exports products to 25 countries.

“I am going to say the words that (the opposition) like:  expropriate it,” the socialist former soldier said during his  regular Sunday television broadcast.

Earlier this year, Sidetur workers went on strike at the  company’s biggest plant, at Puerto Ordaz in the south of the  Andean nation, halting work for several months in a dispute  over health and safety conditions.

Chavez said Sidetur was producing 40 percent of the steel  rods used in construction in Venezuela.
“You will see at what price we buy them, since they belong  to the people, and at what price we sell the rods,” he said.

The president has ordered several nationalizations in  recent weeks, including a big fertilizer plant, a motor  lubricants maker and a major local farm supplies company.

During his nearly 12 years in power, Chavez has put much of  the OPEC member’s economy under state control. Supporters say  he is redressing years of economic imbalance in the country,  but critics say his policies have scared away investors.

Earlier this month, some workers at another Venezuelan  steel company, Sidor — which is the biggest steelmaker in the  Andean region and the Caribbean — briefly went on strike over  a pay dispute.
That nationalized steel plant was badly hit by power  restrictions during electricity shortages earlier this year.