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21-02-2006 - Metal Bulletin

IRON & STEEL
Corus Teesside’s £40m investment to boost slab capacity

ANTONIO MARCEGAGLIA CEO
Antonio Marcegaglia

Teesside Cast Products, the slabmaking operation of Corus in northeast England, has embarked on a £40 million ($70 million) project to increase the quality and capacity of its output by modernising its two slab casters and slowly phasing out the bloom caster.

Antonio Marcegaglia, ceo of Marcegaglia in Italy, a member of a consortium of the slab buyers that committed to investing in the Teesside plant in return for slab supplies, said the consortium will provide roughly £30 million of the finance for the project.

Corus said that the £40 million investment includes capital expenditure to improve the logistics of the business. The company will acquire a dedicated fleet of rail wagons to transport slab to Teesport.

The investment is part of a $100 million programme that the Anglo-Dutch steelmaker has financed in conjunction with the consortium of steelmakers led by Duferco and including Marcegaglia, Mexico's Imsa and Korea's Dongkuk
(MB Jan 5 2005).

The bulk of the £40 million will go on revamping of the slab casters, said Marcegaglia.
Under the agreement bewteen the consortium and Corus, the consortium members will receive a portion of the slab produced at Teesside at cost price in return for financing investments at the site.

“The revamping of the slab casters will increase the slab casting speed, raising theoutput of the casters,” said Marcegaglia. He added that the modernisation of the casters will also improve the quality of the slabs cast from these machines. “We believe this investment will improve the reliability of the whole system,” he said.

The two slab casters currently produce a total of 3.2 million tpy of slab, said Marcegaglia, out of a total capacity of 3.4 million tpy.

“The plan is to do 3.6-3.8 million tpy once the investment is completed,” said Marcegaglia, in order to bring casting capacity into line with the 3.8 million tpy output of the nearby Redcar blast furnace, one of Western Europe's largest, whose capacity is a theoretical 4 million tpy.

Marcegaglia said a contract for the revamping of the casters is under negotiation with two plantmakers. “We plan to have it in place in the next two to three weeks,” he said. He added: “We plan to have this specific project completed in about 12-14 months.”

Teesside's 1.2 million tpy capacity bloom caster will be decommissioned this year, said Marcegaglia. “It produces only occasionally at the moment and will stop casting altogether during the course of the year, which will enable Teesside to concentrate on the slab production.” The project will also include small investments at Teesside's steel melting converters.

Officials at Corus TCP did not return calls.

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Antonio Marcegaglia - IRON & STEEL

 
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