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2014年3月31日星期一

Q4 TATA Steel to Start Production In Kalinganagar Mill


PTI reported that TATA Steel will begin production from its greenfield plant at Kalinganagar in Odisha from the last quarter of next fiscal.


R TV Narendran MD of TATA Steel told PTI “Kalinganagar project is going on. It will start production from the fourth quarter of next fiscal.”


The Kalinganagar project, which will essentially produce flat products, will have 3 million tonne per annum capacity in the first phase. This would be doubled in the next phase.


The Odisha project is the second integrated unit of TATA Steel in India other than Jamshedpur, where it recently completed brownfield expansion to enhance the capacity to 10 million tonnes per annum.



 



Source – Steelguru.com


Q4 TATA Steel to Start Production In Kalinganagar Mill

Steel Pipe Thickness Tolerance of API 5L, ASTM A53 and EN10219


Steel Pipe Thickness Tolerance of API 5L, ASTM A53 and EN10219



 



As different steel pipe, both seamless pipes and welded pipes, will used for different application. Then for different usage, there will be many different steel pipe standards in the pipe fields. Thus there are different requirements. So, it's important to know what's your application before you inquire pipes.



 



Here we compare three steel pipe standard:



API 5L-This International Standard specifies requirements for the manufacture of two product specification levels(PSL 1 and PSL 2) of seamless and welded steel pipes for use in pipeline transportation systems in the

petroleum and natural gas industries.



ASTM A53-This Standard is Specification for Pipe, Steel, Black and Hot-Dipped, Zinc-Coated, Welded and Seamless.Pipe ordered under this specification is intended for mechanical and pressure applications and is also acceptable for ordinary uses in steam, water, gas, and air lines.



EN10219-This Standardis for Cold formed welded structural hollow sections of non-alloy and fine grain steels.



 



Just because it's for differenat applications, and the thickness tolerance is different to each other.



 



API 5L-Thickness Tolerance



 



 


Steel Pipe Thickness Tolerance of API 5L, ASTM A53 and EN10219

Energex Tube Shutting Down


Every worker at Energex Tube will be laid off within two months. It’s uncertain if they’ll ever return to their jobs.



Employees at the Dain Ave. plant — formerly Lakeside Steel — were told Monday a decision was made to idle operations “for an undetermined amount of time” due to market conditions and “unfairly traded imports into North America.”



“This will result in the indefinite layoff of all hourly employees until business conditions change,” said a layoff notice obtained by The Tribune.



The company provided eight weeks’ notice of indefinite layoff, effective Monday. It will continue to extend health and insurance benefits for the duration of the layoff, the notice said.



Rick Alakas, president of Unifor Local 523, is trying to hold onto some optimism. But closure weighs heavily on his mind.



“I am very concerned about the future of that plant,” he said Tuesday. “This setback is a real blow to us.”



Alakas said the layoffs apply to everyone there — 126 hourly workers and 36 salaried employees.



“It’s a very difficult period,” he said. “It’s emotional and it’s difficult, not only for our members in the plant, but for their families.”



He said a meeting is being planned to address workers and their spouses or partners next Tuesday about what will happen in the coming weeks and to give them a sense of what’s happening with the North American steel industry.



He said workers for now will complete scheduled production jobs and then move into cleanup mode for the shutdown.



Energex Tube is owned by U.S.-based JMC Steel Group, which purchased the plant for $58 million in April 2012.



An announcement posted on the Energex Tube website Tuesday said: “Despite significant operational improvements within the Canadian plant, market conditions, primarily the influx of unfairly traded OCTG (oil country tubular goods) imports into North America, have greatly reduced the ability for our Welland, Ont., operation to be profitable. The company has decided to idle operations located at 160 Dain Ave.”



It went on to say: “We expect that all layoffs will be completed by May 19, 2014. This announcement and timeline are based on the best information currently available but may be affected by various factors. Energex would like to thank our customers and employees for their continued support.”



JMC Steel spokesman Jelani Rucker and Energex Tube president Randy Boswell could not be reached for comment Tuesday.



JMC Steel, too, blamed low-priced imported steel products for its decision to cut 110 Welland jobs in July 2012.



Work began last May to demolish more than half the buildings at the Welland plant. Demolition started with more than 50% of the structures there, and subsequent plans called for the demolition of buildings along Ontario Rd. that had been used for finishing 16-inch pipe.



In total, more than 37,000 square metres (400,000 square feet) of buildings were to be demolished.



The company announced in late 2012 that it was phasing out production of its eight-inch pipe and at that time permanently cut 94 jobs.



“The future is difficult. We are holding out hope that there is opportunities for that plant to resume operations,” Alakas said.



“This isn’t the first plant that’s been idled” in the steel industry, he said. “What we’re experiencing in Welland is nothing new.”



He said the shutdown will cause a ripple effect in the community, be it for suppliers, transporters or restaurants and shops — “pretty much across the board.”



“It’s another sad day for the city,” said Welland Mayor Barry Sharpe, “and I’m sure it’s absolutely devastating news for the employees and their families.”



He said the last time he was involved in a corporate call with the company was February 2013, “and it ended in a positive note” about plans for the future that included a stretch production mill and new furnace, some of those plans which were followed up on.



Sharpe said following a meeting with city manager Craig Stirtzinger Tuesday the municipality is willing to support any case put forward to support North American steel workers.



“We’re prepared to step forward if there’s a need to meet the minister of economic development,” he added.



Still, the massive scope of the issue for which Energex appears a victim “makes you feel pretty powerless,” the mayor said.



Dumping charges levelled by North America’s steel industry go back well over a decade, and it seems nothing has been yet done to look after domestic jobs.



Welland MP Malcolm Allen said the Canadian government has left industry problems to be ironed out in courtrooms, but small- and medium-sized industries and related machine shops — and those shrinking big companies — don’t have millions of dollars to throw toward uncertain outcomes.



Many finished steel products coming into Canada, he said, are arriving at prices lower than the international market price for the raw material.



“In my view, it’s purely dumping — no doubt about it.”



Trade agreements with countries where environmental control standards are lesser and labour costs are lower, but where it’s also difficult to identify points of subsidization, need to be re-examined, Allen said.



“Welland is a microcosm of what has happened across the broader sector of manufacturing in Ontario,” Allen said.



“It’s extremely troubling,” he said of the local Energex plant, “since they’ve done so many things over there to be competitive.”



From:http://www.wellandtribune.ca/2014/03/25/energex-tube-plant-idled-in-welland


Energex Tube Shutting Down

2014年3月30日星期日

Baoshan teel Profit Fell in 2013


Bloomberg reported that Baoshan Iron & Steel Company of China profit fell 42% last year to the lowest level since 2009 after an asset sale inflated earnings a year earlier.



Net income declined to CNY 5.82 billion or CNY 0.35 per share from CNY 10.1 billion or CNY 0.0.58. Sales fell 0.7% to CNY 189.7 billion.



Baoshan recorded a one time gain of CNY 9.09 billion in 2012 by selling stainless steel and specialty steel units to its parent. 



The supplier of half of China’s automotive steel is set to benefit from the nation’s growing appetite for cars even as officials in Beijing enact policies to tackle a steel overcapacity.



In 2014, the company said that it will put limited resources into products with stronger margins and is seeing sales from cold rolled automobile plates growing 10.8% from a year earlier amid an oversupply in steel industry.



Source – Bloomberg


Baoshan teel Profit Fell in 2013

World First X80 Grade ERW Pipe by JFE Steel



JFE Steel Corporation announced that it has developed the world’s first API X80 grade high frequency welded steel pipe with thickness of one inch (25.4 mm). JFE Steel also announced that it has received the first two commercial orders for its uniquely thick HFW pipe.



The HFW pipe is being manufactured at a refurbished 26 inch HFW steel pipe mill within the company’s Chita Works. API X80 grade, means the pipe’s minimum yield strength is 555 MPa.



The orders for the new one inch wall HFW steel pipe were placed by Dril-Quip Inc. and GE Oil & Gas, two of the world’s leading manufacturers of oil and natural gas drilling equipment. They will use the pipes as conductor casing, or steel pipe that is mainly used to secure blowout preventers and wellhead equipment before drilling the casing hole. Shipments to both customers will take place this spring.



As drilling operations for oil and natural gas expand around the world, oil companies are drilling into and pumping from increasingly deep seabeds, requiring them to use steel pipes with extra strong, extra thick walls capable of withstanding very high pressures to support drilling operations. As it has been technically difficult to produce such HFW steel pipes continuously with a high degree of accuracy, many oil companies have used DSAW or seamless pipes for conductor casings in especially harsh environments.



JFE Steel, an expert in the production of high-strength, thick wall steel pipes, developed forming technology for the cost effective production of X80 grade HFW steel pipe with an unprecedented thickness of one inch. The company also established an integrated system of processes from steelmaking to pipe forming, to produce this special pipe.



The company expects its new HFW steel pipe to be used not only as conductor casing, but also as high quality line pipes for offshore pipelines and other purposes.



From http://www.steelguru.com/international_news/JFE_Steel_develops_world_first_X80_grade_HFW_pipe/333814.html



 




World First X80 Grade ERW Pipe by JFE Steel

ASTM A252 Gr.3 Piling Pipe

ASTM A252 Gr.3 Piling Pipe

All our astm a232 Piling Pipe are qualified in ASTM standard or other international pipe standards. 
Quality Standard:
GB/T3091 Welded steel pipe for low pressure liquid delivery
GB/T9711 Petroleum and natural gas industries--Steel pipe for pipelines
IS: 3589 Steel tubes for water and sewage
IS : 1978-1982:Steel tubes for use in transportation of oil; gas & Petroleum products
ASTM A53 Standard Specification for Pipe, Steel, Black and Hot-Dipped, Zinc-Coated, Welded and Seamless
DIN 2458 WELDED STEEL PIPES AND TUBES
EN10217 Welded steel tubes for pressure purposes. Technical delivery conditions. Non-alloy steel tubes with specified room temperature properties
SY/T5037 Spiral submerged arc-welded steel pipe for pipelines for low pressure field fluid service
SY/T 5040 Spiral submerged arc-welded steel pipe piles
CJ/T 3022 Spiral submerged-arc welded steel pipe for municipal heat supply
IS : 1978 Steel tubes for use in transportation of oil; gas & Petroleum products
ASTM A252 WELDED AND SEAMLESS STEEL PIPE PILES

Coating Standard:
ANSI/AWWA C104/A21.4 American National Standard for Cement-Mortar Lining for Ductile-Iron Pipe and Fittings for Water
ISO 21809 Petroleum and natural gas industries -- External coatings for buried or submerged pipelines used in pipeline transportation systems
DIN 30670 Polyethylen coatings of steel pipes and fittings
Steel Grade:
BS:1387, EN10217:S185, S235,S235JR, S235 G2H, S275, S275JR, S355JRH, S355J2H, St12, St13, St14, St33, St37, St44, ST52
ASTM A 53: Gr.A, Gr B, Gr C, Gr.D
API 5L: A, B, X42, X46, X52, X56, X60, X65 X70
GB/T9711: L175, L210, L245, L290, L320, L360, L290, L320, L360, L390, L415, L450, L485, L555
GB/T3091, SY/T5037, SY/T 5040,CJ/T 3022:Q195, Q215, Q235, Q275, Q295, Q345, 08F, 08, 08AL, 08F, 10F, 10, HG5, DF08 SPHC, M8
Size:Outer Diamter: 33.4mm - 660mm (1" - 26")
Wall Thickness: 5 mm - 25mm
Length: 6mtr-18mtr
End:
square ends (straight cut, saw cut, and torch cut). or beveled for welding, beveled,
Surface:
Lightly oiled, Hot dip galvanized, Electro galvanized, Black, Bare, Varnish coating/Anti rust oil, Protective Coatings (Coal Tar Epoxy, Fusion Bond Epoxy, 3-layers PE)