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Ardagh Metal To Invest In Beverage Can Plant In Northern Ireland

By Dayeeta Das
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Ardagh Metal To Invest In Beverage Can Plant In Northern Ireland

Ardagh Metal Packaging has announced plans to build a $200 million (€178.2 million) beverage can plant in Northern Ireland.

While part of the United Kingdom, Northern Ireland has stayed in the European Union's single market for goods since Britain's departure last year, meaning its exports to the rest of the 27-nation bloc face no customs checks, tariffs or paperwork.

Ardagh Metal, one of the world's biggest packaging companies and a subsidiary of Luxembourg-based Ardagh Group, said the plant would service the growing needs of its customers, including Coca-Cola, in Ireland, the United Kingdom and the rest of Europe.

"We are delighted to be investing in Northern Ireland supporting our clients' sustainability needs by locating capacity closer to our end customers," Ardagh Metal chief executive, Oliver Graham, said in a statement.

'A Powerful Magnet'

The top EU official overseeing the implementation of the so-called Northern Ireland protocol said earlier on Friday that the unparalleled access it grants to two of the world's largest markets should make Northern Ireland "a powerful magnet" for foreign direct investment.

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European Commission vice-president Maros Sefcovic was speaking ahead of talks with his British counterpart in Brussels to seek to break an impasse over the full implementation of the protocol.

The checks on the movement of goods to Northern Ireland from mainland Britain as a result of maintaining access to the EU's single market has disturbed some trade from the rest of the United Kingdom and angered the province's pro-British unionists.

The EU has offered Britain a package of measures to ease the transit of goods to Northern Ireland but London says significant differences remain between the two sides' positions.

In February of this year, Ardagh Group SA announced plans to spin off its metal packaging business through a merger with a listed blank-check firm backed by billionaire Alec Gores, in a deal that values the new company at $8.5 billion (€6.95 billion).

News by Reuters, edited by ESM. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: European Supermarket Magazine.

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