Mechel has announced that the Electric Arc Furnace No. 2 at its Tikhvin Ferroalloy Smelting Plant (JSC TFZ) in Russia was started up after its repair on 27 May.
Electric Arc Furnace No. 2 at Mechel’s Tikhvin Ferroalloy Smelting Plant subsidiary was commissioned on May 27th 2009. Thus, three electric arc furnaces currently operate at the plant with only one EAF remaining in stand by mode.
JSC TFZ is the youngest ferroalloy smelting plant in Russia. It comprises four EAFs with 22.5 MVA capacity each, which are designed to smelt high-carbon ferrochrome. The process of the furnaces commissioning took place from April 2007 to April 2008.
The release said that “From October 2008, the plant’s operations were limited due to decrease in demand for its products and increased prices for imported chrome ore. From October 2008 to May 2009, ferrochrome was smelted with only two furnaces operating with underutilisation of their capacities. Owing to such measures, the plant managed to keep its operability and staff composition. During that time, scheduled maintenance was performed by the plant’s own personnel, which enabled increasing the equipment’s effectiveness. Specifically, the plant’s water-cooling system has been repaired and gas cleaning system tubes have been replaced with those capable to operate under higher temperature, which improved quality of waste gas treatment.”
It added that “From January 2009, steady supplies of high quality chrome ore commenced from the new Voskhod Chrome Mining Plant in Kazakhstan, which is a part of Mechel’s ferroalloy sub-holding, Oriel Resources Ltd. At the same time, increase in demand for high-carbon ferrochrome was observed on the markets from April 2009. Combination of these two factors made it possible to increase utilization of the plant’s capacity.”
Mr Vladimir Polin senior VP of Mechel OAO commented “The increased utilisation of capacities of our ferroalloy subsidiaries, Tikhvin Ferroalloy Smelting Plant and Southern Urals Nickel Plant (commissioning of the latter’s shaft furnace No. 8 was announced previously) proves that our ferroalloys segment development strategy and our anti-crisis program are quite efficient. We supported each of the Group’s ferroalloy plants with its own raw material base and thus ensured our independence from expensive imported ore. It also enabled us to fully utilise our production chains’ synergy. The scheduled maintenance works performed during the period of lower demand allowed us to increase performance of the equipment. And, at last, careful monitoring of the market situation allowed us to promptly respond to the demand growth taken shape and to increase utilization of the equipment in a view of the orders available in our order book,”
Source: Steel Guru/Mechel
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