The Chinese Iron and Steel Industry Response to the Challenges of Iron Ore Supply

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Y Sha
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
8
File Size:
2080 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 12, 2013

Abstract

During the last two decades, China has expanded its iron and steel industry very quickly, from less than 100 Mt/a steel production to over 700 Mt/a. It caused big increases in both domestic iron ore production and imported iron ore quantities year by year. The mode of iron ore supply has changed from almost all domestic supply to major tonnes of imported ore plus domestic ore supply. Over 200 blast furnaces with volumes larger than 1000 m3 each have been built and put into operation. Sinter machines have been enlarged quickly. There are now 135 sinter machines with =200 m2 sintering area each. Pellet production increased from 11.94 Mt in 1999 to 210 Mt in 2011, resulting from rapidly increasing domestic concentrate supply and rapid development of the grate-kiln process. The typical ferrous burden constitution is high basicity sinter plus pellets plus lump. The pellet proportion increased and the sinter proportion decreased gradually. A lot of technical improvements, like deep bed sintering, sintering with a high ratio of limonite, composite sintering, pellet process optimisation, a high ratio of hematite in pelletisation, blast furnace operation with low-grade ferrous burdens and hazardous element control, etc have been made to enhance iron burden quality and to reduce hot metal cost. Chinese iron and steel production is expected to increase slightly in the next few years. Its overcapacity should be controlled effectively. Given the variations of iron ore supply, pellet production will keep progressing in terms of production scale and pellet quality, the sintering process will be improved further by various measures to utilise different ores efficiently, and ferrous burden constitution will be optimised continuously to realise the lowest cost of hot metal production.CITATION:Sha, Y and Wang, Z, 2013. The Chinese iron and steel industry response to the challenges of iron ore supply, in Proceedings Iron Ore 2013 , pp 7-14 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Citation

APA: Y Sha  (2013)  The Chinese Iron and Steel Industry Response to the Challenges of Iron Ore Supply

MLA: Y Sha The Chinese Iron and Steel Industry Response to the Challenges of Iron Ore Supply. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2013.

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