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Learning outcomes

By the end of this session, students would be able to examine the strategic and operational drivers of industrial decarbonization in energy-intensive sectors such as steelmaking, using Tata Steel’s transformation as a benchmark case; critically evaluate corporate pathways to net zero, including hydrogen-based steelmaking, carbon capture and circular economy initiatives and assess their transferability across emerging market contexts; apply integrative strategic frameworks such as strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats, the natural resource-based view (NRBV) and stakeholder theory to analyze how firms embed sustainability within competitive strategy; debate the trade-offs and institutional challenges faced by emerging market enterprises as they seek to align domestic industrial policy, financial constraints and global environmental, social and governance imperatives; and formulate evidence-based strategic recommendations for Tata Steel and comparable industrial firms pursuing low-carbon growth while safeguarding long-term competitiveness.

Case overview/synopsis

This case study examines Tata Steel Ltd.’s ambitious transformation toward a zero-carbon future in the context of an emerging market. It traces the company’s sustainability journey, focusing on the adoption of hydrogen-based steelmaking, carbon capture and storage, digital transformation, renewable energy integration and circular economy practices. At the center of the case is a dilemma faced in 2025 by chief sustainability officer, Dr Raghav Mehta: whether to accelerate commercialization of hydrogen-based direct reduced iron in India or to proceed cautiously with phased pilots. This decision involved balancing technological ambition, financial commitments, stakeholder expectations and policy uncertainties. The dilemma offers rich opportunities for classroom discussion on corporate strategy, decarbonization and decision-making in emerging markets.

Complexity academic level

This case is designed for postgraduate management students, particularly those enrolled in Master of Business Administration (MBA) or executive MBA programs with specializations in strategy, sustainability or corporate finance. It is also suitable for courses on corporate social responsibility, environmental management and business in emerging markets. The case assumed no prior technical knowledge of the steel industry but expected students to be familiar with basic concepts of corporate strategy and stakeholder management.

Supplementary materials

Teaching notes are available for educators only.

Subject code

CSS 11: Strategy.

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