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Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. said Wednesday it would take over the responsibility for the pension plans of 70,000 workers and retirees from Delphi Corp. (DPHIQ).

In a filing last month of modifications to its bankruptcy plan, the auto-parts maker said changed economic circumstances would no longer allow it to continue to fund its defined benefit pension plans after its emergence from bankruptcy. The company also said at the time it expected the PBGC would take over the plans.

Most of Delphi's creditors rejected its plan to sell its assets to General Motors Co. and private-equity firm Platinum Equity, although the PBGC was among those who approved it. Delphi said Tuesday it will still pursue the plan as it tries to leave bankruptcy.

A group of Delphi retirees filed suit last week, saying it needs an independent administrator to help stop the company from terminating the plan and transferring the obligation to the PBGC.

The PBGC said it expects to be responsible for about $6.2 billion of the company's two largest pension plans' shortfalls, which are expected to be more than $7 billion. It said it will also be responsible for $50 million in underfunding for the other four smaller plans.

It said it will pay pension benefits up to the limits set by law, which in 2009 for a 65-year-old is $54,000 a year.

Delphi, which was spun off from GM in 1999 and filed for bankruptcy in 2005, has been hurt by industry woes and has struggled for more than a year to pull together the financing it needs to exit bankruptcy.

-By Kerry Grace Benn, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2353; kerry.benn@dowjones.com