CISDI wins prime role in Liberty’s game-changing steel plans Down Under
Date:2019/2/5 Source: CISDI
CISDI
wins prime role in Liberty’s game-changing steel plans Down Under
—Whyalla
upgrading begins and feasibility study for mega plant is launched
Two major
transformational steel projects got underway at the Whyalla Steelworks in
Southern Australia during December.
A feasibility
study began for a new 10 million-tonne mega steel plant at the site, which
would be one of the largest in the world.
In addition,
upgrades started at the site’s existing pulverised coal injection plant. Both
projects are being heralded as game-changing for the city of Whyalla 400
kilometres north-west of Adelaide.
They are being
carried out by GFG Alliance’s global steel manufacturing arm Liberty Primary
Steel, with assistance from CISDI.
GFG Alliance is
an international grouping of businesses founded by the British Gupta family.
Its business model encompasses mining, energy generation, metals and
engineering, underpinned by financial services and a substantial property
portfolio.
Liberty Steel’s
range of manufactured products comply with national and international
quality-certified standards and meet stringent customer specifications.
The
newly-signed financing feasibility study will assess proposals for a greenfield
10-million-tonne capacity steelworks, which will be sited beside the existing
1.20-million-tonne plant in Whyalla City, and become a major slab supply base.
Proposals are
for the development to be carried out in three phases, each with an output
capacity of 3.50 million tonnes a year.
The new
steelworks will feature three blast furnaces, each with a volume of 4,350 cubic
metres, four 250-tonne basic oxygen furnaces, five slab casters plus sintering,
coking and plant-wide utilities plants.
Australia’s Prime Minister
Scott Morrison attended the signing ceremony for both projects, along with
Australia’s Labour Party leader Bill Shorten, the governor of South Australia
Steven Marshall.
The mayor of
Whyalla City, Clare McLaughlin. GFG’s executive chairman and CEO Sanjeev Gupta
and president of Metallurgical Corporation of China Ltd. Mengxing Zhang were
also present.
Mr Gupta shared his story of
coming to Australia to build a steel plant and expressed his confidence in MCC
and the future success of Whyalla.
He commented: “This
transformation will vastly improve the operational, financial and environmental
performance and the new steelworks will pave the way for Whyalla to become
an enticing, global hub for innovative industry and contribute to the
development of the city of Whyalla and to the whole Australian economy and
society.”
“MCC represents
state-of-the-art steel engineering and its corporation, and CISDI is highly
capable of providing the full-process and intelligent solutions for our plant.”
The city’s mayor welcomed the
scheme. “With GFG committed to prioritising local skills, this project will
create thousands of additional construction jobs and several hundred ongoing
jobs,” commented Clare McLaughlin.
MCC’s Mengxing Zhang
emphasised that steel was MCC’s core business and was expecting the highest
standards from its subsidiaries. “Your work is a reflection of China’s steel
skills and you will be utilising the most advanced concepts and expertise for
the creation of a steelworks which will be a world-class benchmark for green,
efficient and smart steel manufacture,” he told his teams.
This is CISDI’s
first export of full-process steel engineering to a developed country and its
second feasibility study project for a 10-million-tonne steelworks in the
Pacific Rim. It will showcase CISDI’s bespoke design and financing feasibility
expertise.
Leaders of GFG Alliance and China Metallurgical
Group Corporation at Whyalla
The signing ceremony between GFG Alliance and
MCC-CISDI
CISDI’s team, working at Whyalla Steelworks