Tuesday, May 11, 2010

ArcelorMittal releases 2009 Corporate Responsibility Report:


Our progress towards Safe Sustainable Steel 24% improvement in safety record achieved and corporate responsibility commitments maintained despite challenging economic environment
Luxembourg, 11 May 2010 - ArcelorMittal, the world’s largest steelmaker, today issued its corporate responsibility report for the 2009 financial year: Our progress towards Safe Sustainable Steel.

Published to coincide with the company’s annual general meeting at its Luxembourg headquarters, thisreport demonstrates continued progress against ArcelorMittal’s goal of delivering safe, sustainable steel, despite the challenges posed by the most severe economic downturn in recent memory.

Key highlights of this year’s corporate responsibility report include a significant improvement in the company’s safety record. ArcelorMittal’s Group Lost Time Injury Frequency Rate fell to 1.9 per million hours worked in 2009 – representing a 24 per cent improvement on the 2008 figure.

The Group’s target for 2010 is to continue to reduce its accident rate by a further 20%.

Other key corporate responsibility highlights for 2009 included the following:

· Invested US$235 million in research and development. With 15 major R&D centres, ArcelorMittal possesses a capability for innovation that is unmatched in the global steel industry

· Reaffirmed commitment to secure an 8% reduction in CO2 emissions by 2020, against a 2007 baseline – equivalent to 170kg reduction per tonne of steel produced

· Encouraging professional development – 278,000 hours of online learning supported by theArcelorMittal University in 2009

· The ArcelorMittal Foundation celebrated its 2nd International Volunteer Work Day, with over
8,500 employees participating at 75 sites around the world “There is no doubt that 2009 represented one of the most challenging years on record, not only for the steel industry but across the business world,” comments Lakshmi N. Mittal, Chairman and CEO, ArcelorMittal. “Despite this dramatic backdrop, which had inevitable repercussions for our global

operations, I hope this latest report underlines the fact that our commitment to corporate responsibility remained unwavering. In particular, I would like to draw attention to our significant improvement in the overwhelmingly important area of safety – a positive trend we are determined to build upon in 2010,” he adds.


ArcelorMittal is determined to push the boundaries of steel, not only in terms of technical innovation and production, but also driving industry best-practice in terms of social development, environmental policy and transparent governance. Selected international highlights of these social commitments during 2009 and 2010 included the following projects:


· China: The ArcelorMittal Foundation donated US$1.54 million to assist with the reconstruction of Xinhuamen Primary School following the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, creating a new steelframed facility that offers a much higher degree of earthquake protection

· Liberia: ArcelorMittal formalised its support for the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative(EITI), having been an active participant in this pioneering corporate transparency project since May 2007

· South Africa: ArcelorMittal South Africa, the ArcelorMittal Foundation and the South African
Department of Education signed an agreement to build 10 new schools using innovative steelframed construction techniques

· United States: ArcelorMittal joined the Sustain Our Great Lakes coalition – an innovative, publicprivate partnership designed to protect the crucial ecosystems of the Great Lakes region, which contain 20 per cent of the world’s fresh water

· Haiti: Through the ArcelorMittal Foundation, the Company made a donation of 1 million USD to
help the relief efforts in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, following the earthquake that struck the island on
Tuesday 12 January “As the world’s largest steelmaker, we consider it our responsibility as a business to drive best-practice in sustainable steel – not only from an environmental perspective but also in the equally important areas of social development and employee welfare,” explains Gonzalo Urquijo, member of ArcelorMittal’s Group Management Board and responsible for Corporate Responsibility. “With operations in 60 countries, ensuring a truly consistent level of performance across this international footprint is always going to be a challenge – but it is a challenge we can overcome through a shared commitment not only to innovation in steel production, but also to the vital considerations of corporate responsibility,” he adds.

The 2009 corporate responsibility report, Our progress towards Safe Sustainable Steel, focuses on the  four key pillars of ArcelorMittal’s corporate responsibility strategy: Investing in our people; Making steel more sustainable; Enriching our communities; and Transparent Governance 

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