Steel Mills

U.S. Steel to Add 500k tpy of Pig Iron Production at Gary Works
Written by Tim Triplett
February 28, 2022
U.S. Steel Corp. is investing $60 million at Gary Works to give the Indiana mill the capability to produce up to 500,000 tons of pig iron annually and provide a critical raw material for the steelmaker’s electric arc furnaces. Once complete in the first half of 2023, pig iron production at Gary will provide nearly 50% of the ore-based metallics needs of the company’s Big River Steel subsidiary in Osceola, Ark.
“U.S. Steel’s low-cost iron ore is an important strategic advantage for the company,” said U.S. Steel President and CEO David Burritt. “Our ability to control this important steelmaking input is a valuable competitive differentiator for our growing fleet of electric arc furnaces. An investment in pig iron is an important first step to translating our low-cost iron ore advantage to our EAF footprint while driving efficiencies at Gary Works.”
The announcement by U.S. Steel comes as no surprise as mills across the country rethink their raw material strategies. Experts predict the growth of lower-emitting EAF steel production will result in a shortage of prime scrap in the years to come, boosting demand for pig iron to fill the gap. The conflict between Russia and Ukraine – both major exporters of pig iron – stands to make the shortage of iron units even worse. Mills like Cleveland-Cliffs, Nucor and now U.S. Steel have taken steps to keep control of raw material supplies in their own hands, including investments in scrap processors and production of scrap substitutes such as direct-reduced iron (DRI), hot-briquetted iron (HBI) and pig iron.
U.S. Steel said its decision to self-fund pig iron production rather than contract for it is expected to further enhance Big River Steel’s cost structure while adding value at Gary Works by driving blast furnace efficiencies without reducing Gary Works’ raw steel output. The company expects to maintain its previously stated 2022 capital spending budget of $2.3 billion by offsetting the pig iron investment within the capital budget.
By Tim Triplett, Tim@SteelMarketUpdate.com

Tim Triplett
Read more from Tim TriplettLatest in Steel Mills

USW seeks clarity on plans for Granite City Works
The United Steelworkers union has asked U.S. Steel to elaborate on its Granite City Works plans following reports that the steelmaker is ending processing at the facility.

Nucor maintains plate prices, opens October order book
Nucor aims to keep plate prices flat for a seventh straight month with the opening of its October order book.

ArcelorMittal Mexico to import from sister mills as it works to resume DRI production
ArcelorMittal has partially restarted operations at its direct reduction plant in Lazaro Cardenas, Michoacan. An explosion on Aug. 18 rocked the massive steelworks on Mexico’s Pacific coast, impacting production of direct-reduced iron (DRI).

Fall maintenance outages are coming in hot
Labor Day has passed, the sun is starting to set a little earlier each day, and cooler weather has begun to find its way down to many of us across North America. And you know what that means for the steel industry… Fall maintenance outages!

AISI: Domestic steel production ticks up
US raw steel production ticked up in the week ending on Sept. 6 after a decrease the week before, according to the most recent data from the American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI).