The glimmer of stainless: stainless steel production continues to increase around the globe, driving the need for scrap material.Stainless steel stainless steel: see steel. stainless steel Any of a family of alloy steels usually containing 10–30% chromium. The presence of chromium, together with low carbon content, gives remarkable resistance to corrosion and heat. has been around for approximately 100 years. During that time, the meal has shown an annual growth rate of 6 percent, something very few metals can claim. World stainless steel production reached 28 million metric tons last year. Meanwhile, prices for stainless steel have been climbing. The key reason for the price increase is the soaring soaring: see flight; glider. soaring or gliding Sport of flying a glider or sailplane. The craft is towed behind a powered airplane to an altitude of about 2,000 ft (600 m) and then released. price of nickel nickel, metallic chemical element; symbol Ni; at. no. 28; at. wt. 58.69; m.p. about 1,453°C;; b.p. about 2,732°C;; sp. gr. 8.902 at 25°C;; valence 0, +1, +2, +3, or +4. . For 2007, smelting smelting, in metallurgy, any process of melting or fusion, especially to extract a metal from its ore. Smelting processes vary in detail depending on the nature of the ore and the metal involved, but they are typified in the use of the blast furnace. production is expected to be approximately 27.7 million metric tons, with about 14.7 million metric tons of finished product. Approximately 5.4 million metric tons of long product and 19.3 million tons of flat products will be produced. Both of these product groups will increase by roughly 12 percent this year from the weak production figures posted last year. A REGIONAL OUTLOOK. The stainless steel market is a high-quality industry with one clear trend: Either a company focuses on producing long products or on producing flat products; few manufacturing produce both. The largest flat-products plant in Europe is Ourokumpu's Tornio Stainless Steel works in Finland. The company also has plants in Sweden and Britain. Dusseldorf based Thyssen Krupp Group has plants in the German cities of Krefeld and Bochum as well as its largest stainless steel plant in Terni, Italy, just north of Rome. Arcelor Mittal prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the company, the plant is a major strategies structural investment in stainless steel, allowing the company to close its steel plants in Ardoise and Isbergues in France. A French company producing stainless steel long products is Ugitech, which is a subsidiary of Schmolz + Bickenbach of Switzerland. Ugitech specializes in stainless steel and alloy alloy (ăl`oi, əloi`) [O. Fr.,=combine], substance with metallic properties that consists of a metal fused with one or more metals or nonmetals. long products. The company joined with two German firms to form the largest stainless steel long production company in the world. Another European-based company, Acerinox, operates a stainless steel plant in Spain close to Gibraltar. The market for stainless steel flat products in Eastern Europe Eastern Europe The countries of eastern Europe, especially those that were allied with the USSR in the Warsaw Pact, which was established in 1955 and dissolved in 1991. looks much weaker. There is only one plant, which smelts
Smelts are a family, Osmeridae, of small anadromous fish. sporadically spo·rad·ic also spo·rad·i·cal adj. 1. Occurring at irregular intervals; having no pattern or order in time. See Synonyms at periodic. 2. Appearing singly or at widely scattered localities, as a plant or disease. . However, there is some long product production in the Ural region of Eastern Europe. The United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. continues to hold its own in the arena of stainless steel production, with plants in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Kentucky. In the United States, Acerinox's subsidiary, North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. Stainless (NAS (1) See network access server. (2) (Network Attached Storage) A specialized file server that connects to the network. A NAS device contains a slimmed-down operating system and a file system and processes only I/O requests by supporting the popular ), has opened the largest stainless steel project in the country in Kentucky. Earlier this year NAS announced an ambitious plan for the facility, where it will be adding a ladle furnace furnace, enclosed space for the burning of fuel. There are many kinds of furnaces, the type depending upon the fuel and the use to which the heat produced within it is put. Most familiar are the furnaces used in the heating of buildings. , which is expected to start by next March. With the addition, melting capacity for NAS will reach nearly 1.4 million metric tons per year, with 200,000 metric tons earmarked for stainless steel billets. The company also announced that it has entered into a contract to install its fifth cold rolling cold rolling n. The rolling of steel or other metal at room temperature to preserve its original crystal structure. mill, scheduled for completion by April 2009. With the additional capacity, NAS's production will be 846,000 metric tons per year. In Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. , Acesita, based in Brazil, is the only stainless steel flat products producer. Another stainless producer in Latin America, Acinox, which was nationalized by Venezuela, now smelts in Cuba. Stainless steel production in Asia continues to grow. In Asia, when you exclude China, the largest stainless steel producing countries are South Korea and Japan. The largest plant in Asia outside China is a Posco operation in the Pohang region of Korea. The mill produces roughly 2 million tons of stainless steel per year. Japan is home to five manufacturers of flat products and to many different long products producers. The Nippon Steel & Sumikin Stainless Steel Corp. (NSSC NSSC National School Safety Center NSSC National Soil Survey Center NSSC National Senior Service Corps NSSC National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace NSSC NASA Standard Spacecraft Computer NSSC National Space Science Centre (UK) Steel Group), jointly owned by Nippon Steel (80 percent) and Sumitomo Metals (20 percent), also has two stainless steel plants in Taiwan. On the flat products side, Jindal Group and Shah Shah is a Persian term for a monarch (ruler) that has been adopted in many other languages. This term is a Post Islamic Revolution term for monarchs in Iran which is replaced by valie faghih or Supreme Leader. Alloys This is a list of alloys for which an article exists in Wikipedia (or is proposed but not yet written). They are grouped by base metal, in order of increasing atomic number. Within these headings they are in no particular order. , headquartered in India, deal primarily with chrome (jargon) chrome - (From automotive slang via wargaming) Showy features added to attract users but contributing little or nothing to the power of a system. "The 3D icons in Motif are just chrome, but they certainly are *pretty* chrome!" magnesium magnesium (măgnē`zēəm, –zhəm), metallic chemical element; symbol Mg; at. no. 12; at. wt. 24.305; m.p. about 648.8°C;; b.p. about 1,090°C;; sp. gr. 1.738 at 20°C;; valence +2. . Chinas largest company is Shanxi Taigang. Two additional steel plants have been built in the country, resulting in another I million metric tons of capacity. A subsidiary of a Taiwanese company is building a 700,000 metric-ton-capacity mill in China. FINDING THE QUALITY. Europe is currently making the highest-priced stainless steel. U.S.-produced stainless steel is selling for less than European products, which has not happened in 20 years. The price of Chinese stainless steel is 500 Euros less than prices for stainless steel made in Germany Made in Germany is a merchandise mark indicating that a product has been manufactured in Germany. History The label was originally introduced to Britain by the Merchandise Marks Act 1887 . Prices are forecast to remain steady throughout the short term. There are 15 prominent manufacturers of stainless steel flat products, three of which (Thyssenkrupp Stainless, the Acerinox Group and Posco) manufacture around 1.8 million metric tons. Other larger stainless steel producers include Outokumpu and Arcelor. All the other flat products producers manufacture less than 1 million metric tons, with the smallest works producing approximately 400,000 metric tons. Meanwhile, the largest 10 flat producers control 72 percent of the market today, which means that the market has consolidated significantly. The consolidation of stainless steel producers is far greater than that of carbon steel producers. With this tight market, the primary plants find themselves in a position to raise prices quickly when markets demand it. For long products, the top producers are Changwon Stainless (a subsidiary of Posco), Ugitech and Schmolz+Bickenbach, which is partly controlled by Swiss Steel firm Roldan (Acerinox), and Cogne. All these companies have output of around 200,000 metric tons. The top 10 long products producers control roughly 45 percent of the market, and the profit margins are higher than with flat products. Also, marking a significant difference between the two product sectors, many of the long products companies are still family owned. SCRAP SUPPLIERS. About two-thirds of the nickel used in stainless steel production comes from primary nickel production, while the other third, roughly 7.1 million metric tons, comes from scrap. Last year in Europe, the amount of stainless steel scrap collected, mostly from Russia and the Ukraine, totaled around 350,000 metric tons. Europe also is receiving around 150,000 metric tons of nickel scrap from Turkey. Meanwhile, Europe ships roughly 230,000 tons of nickel to Korea and Taiwan, with around 60,000 metric tons going to China. The United States, on the other hand, is a clear net exporter of nickel scrap, with about 110,000 metric tons being shipped to Asia. Further, the United States supplies about as much material to Europe as it does to China. Asians are heavily dependent on nickel supplies from Europe and the United States to make stainless steel. Meanwhile, during the same time, Japan has swung from a net importer of scrap nickel to a net exporter, sending a majority of its nickel to China. While scrap nickel is a globally traded commodity, less than 20 percent of the material is exported; more than 80 percent of the scrap that is produced in one place is consumed in the same geographic region. This holds true for the United States, Europe and Asia. While it may be surprising, the number has not changed significantly throughout the past 20 years and will likely be somewhat similar in the near future. AREAS OF GROWTH. The majority of the new stainless steel smelting capacity that is being planned, around 75 percent, is being built in China. In China, roughly 1.6 million tons of production came online last year; next year, more than 2.2 million tons of new capacity is expected to come online. In comparison, the rest of Asia should be fairly quiet. In North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , there will be some new expansion projects, although nothing too significant. In Europe, we see some new capacity expansion. Other countries such as Vietnam are adding new capacity to produce high-quality steel. Many of these projects are far along. This year stainless steel prices should remain high, though they are expected to fall a little bit next year. The decline in stainless prices means that nickel prices should also fall. Reflecting the strength in nickel markets, the utilization rate for nickel was around 102 percent last year, causing a supply deficiency. This year, the capacity utilization rate Capacity utilization rate The percentage of the economy's total plant and equipment that is currently in production. Usually, a decrease in this percentage signals an economic slowdown, while an increase signals economic expansion. is expected to dip to 100 percent. Next year it is forecast to decline even further. However, with only a handful of larger manufacturers, prices for stainless steel will likely remain fairly high. Meanwhile, the demand for stainless steel in North America will be somewhat soft, though markets should remain strong in Europe and Asia. Even though the whole global economy is somewhat uncertain, the expectations are that prices should be at their high point by the first quarter of this year. Adding to the strength, inventories of stainless steel continue to shrink. In mid-2005 in Germany there was 90 days of stainless steel inventory, but by the middle of last year, inventory levels had declined to 60 days. Meanwhile, inventory levels in the United States are a quarter less, while they have declined by 20 percent in Japan and 25 percent in China. With the shrinking inventory of stainless steel, the scrap recycling recycling, the process of recovering and reusing waste products—from household use, manufacturing, agriculture, and business—and thereby reducing their burden on the environment. industry must convince the stainless steel industry that on a long-term basis high-grade stainless steel scrap is the best source for nickel. Editor's Note Editor's Note (foaled in 1993 in Kentucky) is an American thoroughbred Stallion racehorse. He was sired by 1992 U.S. Champion 2 YO Colt Forty Niner, who in turn was a son of Champion sire Mr. Prospector and out of the mare, Beware Of The Cat. Trained by D. : The following feature was translated and edited from a report written by Markus Moll, an analyst with Steel & Metals Market Research. RELATED ARTICLE: Nickel continues its run. So far this year, nickel prices have jumped by nearly 25 percent. However, as nickel prices continue to defy de·fy tr.v. de·fied, de·fy·ing, de·fies 1. a. To oppose or resist with boldness and assurance: defied the blockade by sailing straight through it. b. gravity, concern is growing that some producers are looking to switch to less costly materials. If this happens, stainless steel markets could be hurt. While substitutions could occur, nobody thinks this will happen soon, though rumblings about the use of alternative blends continues. Meanwhile, nickel inventories grew during the month of March, though London Metals Exchange inventories are down significantly from last year. According to some news reports, BHP Billiton BHP Billiton is the world's largest mining company.[1] Its origin is in the 2001 merger of Australia's Broken Hill Proprietary Company (BHP) and the UK's Billiton, which has a South African background. The result is a dual-listed company. is facing delays in its planned nickel supplies from its new project in Turkey as a result of delays in obtaining the proper licenses. Other companies also are sending out signals that they may have delays in opening their facilities. This should result in continued tightness in the nickel market in the near term. --Dan Sandoval RELATED ARTICLE: Stainless stats. The Specialty Steel Industry of North America has released its most recent statistics on US consumption and imports of stainless steel. In 2006, the consumption of stainless steel strip and sheet climbed 13 percent to 1.843 million tons, while imports increased by 36 percent to 515,017 tons. Twelve-month import penetration for the year was 28 percent, a 5 percent increase. 2006 stainless steel plate imports numbered 112,479 tons, a 35 percent increase compared to 2005. U.S. consumption was 358,406 tons, a 41 percent increase, with a 31 percent import penetration for the year. Stainless steel bar imports declined by 3 percent to 120,456 tons, while U.S. consumption was 233,278 tons, a 1 percent decrease, with a 12-month penetration of 52 percent, a 1 percent decrease. Stainless steel rod saw imports of 31,479 tons, a 24 percent decrease from 2005; U.S. consumption was 71,361 tons, an 8 percent increase, with a 12-month import penetration of 44 percent, a 19 percent decrease. In addition, stainless steel wire saw imports of 48,667 tons last year, an 11 percent increase compared to 2005; U.S. consumption was 85,819 tons, a 12 percent increase, and the 12-month penetration remained at 57 percent for the material. --Dan Sandoval The author is managing director of Steel & Metals Market Research, based in Germany. |
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