Sharing the journey with China’s steel industry
Date:2019/1/25 Source: CISDI
Sharing the journey with China’s steel industry
In recent
decades, steel has become one of the critical fundamental industries of the
Chinese national economy and a pillar of China’s industrial modernisation.
Over the last
60 years, CISDI has been a staunch supporter of the establishment of New
China’s independent industrial system, promoting China’s modernised steel
industry and forging ahead to work with the world’s steel powers.
CISDI: A pioneer of China’s steel engineering
Chongqing
Ferrous Metallurgy Design Institute, the predecessor of CISDI, was formed at
the very outset of New China’s steel industry.
The company was
born in response to the call for building a southwest steel base which would
implement a new steel layout across the country.
The Anshan
Ferrous Metallurgy Design Institute was relocated to Chongqing and renamed
Chongqing Ferrous Metallurgy Design Institute.
The Institute
braved numerous difficulties to set up two flagship steel complexes, Pangang
and Baosteel. It also unveiled China’s steel modernisation drive by designing
WISCO’s 1,700mm hot strip mill.
These early
success stories laid a solid foundation for China’s steel development.
THE ACHIEVEMENTS:
Pangang: China’s first independently-designed and built large steel
complex
Construction
started at Pangang in the 1950s and became well-known for its ivory sculpture
profile.
Chongqing
Ferrous Metallurgy Design Institute designed the world’s first large
vanadium-titanium smelting blast furnace for Pangang, becoming China’s first
design institute able to independently undertake the engineering of a large
steel complex.
The Pangang
site before construction began
Pangang today
Baosteel: China’s most modernised steel complex
Baosteel
Shanghai was the first steel complex in China to be modernised and was built in
line with the new ethos of reform and opening up.
Chongqing
General Iron and Steel Design & Research Institute was the general designer
and main builder.
Baosteel’s buildup enabled China’s steel industry to step forward,
away from technological imports to master planning and self-sufficiency. The
country’s manufacturing and production levels were greatly enhanced.
The prototype
for Baosteel Shanghai before construction
Baosteel
Shanghai today
WISCO 1,700mm hot strip mill: China’s first imported hot strip mill
Chongqing
General Iron and Steel Design & Research Institute took part in the
supportive design and imported engineering management of WISCO’s 1,700mm hot strip mill.
This imported
production line, which in the 1970s featured world-leading technological
levels, had a revolutionary effect on China’s production. It enabled the
country to create for the first time its own vast quantities of sheets for the
automobile industry and for ship-building, bicycle strips, galvanised sheets,
tin-plated and silicon sheets.
The WISCO
1,700mm hot strip mill has been producing smoothly since it went into
production