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WORLD SCENARIO:
Development of the COREX process dates back to the 1980s and was performed by
Voest-Alpine (Germany/Austria). The first commercial COREX unit was constructed
between 1985 and 1987 at ISCOR’s Pretoria works, after first testing the process in
Germany. The plant had various problems (due to inexperience) after the start-up in
December 1987. After reconstruction and de-bugging, the plant has been
successfully in operation since 1989 and was given over to ISCOR(capacity 300,000-
ktpa). Reconstruction of some parts and new operation conditions improved the
performance greatly, leading to production of high quality iron, and high productivity
and availability. The plant demonstrated to be economically attractive, with 30%
lower production costs than the blast furnace on site, despite the low capacity of
the COREX unit. The clean excess fuel gas is used on site in furnaces and coke
ovens. The COREX process proved to be very flexible(with respect to the fuel rate,
and additives addition), insensitive to high alkali content of the ore (and burden), and
easy to operate.
The preliminary success of the first COREX plant lead to the decision to build a
larger COREX (C-2000, 650,000 tonnes per year) in South Africa by Saldanha Steel,
a subsidiary of ISCOR. Saldanha Steel is now a part of Mittal Steel South
Africa which in turn is part of global steel company Arcelor-Mittal. In 1998, ISCOR
decided to close the Corex-based Pretoria plant due to an “unprofitable economic
situation”. The off-gases of the new COREX unit will be used to produce 800,000
tonnes per year of DRI, following a similar design to that at HANBO Steel, South
Korea. This decision also seems to be based on the environmental performance of
the COREX process, as the site is located near a nature preserve. This plant, which
includes a thin slab caster, began operation in January 1999.
Since 1995 a COREX plant has been in operation in the Republic of Korea, with
twice the capacity of the South African plant (C-2000). South Korea’s Pohang Iron
and Steel Co. has a 600,000-700,000 ton per year unit COREX plant. Several more
orders have been placed for C-2000 plants in India, South Korea, and South Africa.
The Chinese steel producer Baosteel Pudong Iron and Steel Co. Ltd. (For Short
Pudong steel) at Luojing, near Shanghai started up a Corex C-3000 plant in early
November 2007, with a nominal production capacity of 1.5 million tons of hot metal
per year. The project was completed under the management of Siemens Metals
Technologies within a period of 29 months.
The latest generation of Corex plants, the C-3000, is ideally suited for integration into
green- or brown-field steel works projects. It can replace the blast furnace, or can be
used as a source of virgin iron for minimills. The economics of the Corex plant
already provide an answer to future scrap and coke shortages, and the continually
increasing demands placed on steel quality. Another alternative is the installation of a
Corex C-3000 plant as a stand-alone merchant plant for the production of hot metal
and/or pig iron.