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Iron and steel industry in India

The Iron and Steel industry in India is among the most important industries within the country. India surpassed Japan as the second largest steel producer in January 2019.[1] As per worldsteel, India's crude steel production in 2018 was at 106.5 tonnes (MT), 4.9% increase from 101.5 MT in 2017, which means that India overtook Japan as the world's second largest steel production country. Japan produced 104.3 MT in year 2018, decrease of 0.3% compared to year 2017.

SAIL Steel Plant at Bokaro Steel City, Jharkhand a supersize steel plant- The second biggest steel plant in India, which contributes 45% of SAIL's profit
Rourkela steel plant

Majority of the steel companies such as Jindal Stainless, JSW Steel, Bhushan Steel etc. were established in the 1970s and 1980s.[2] The Indian steel industry was de-licensed and de-controlled in 1991 and 1992 respectively.[3]

As per the industry body Indian Steel Association (ISA), India's total installed steel-making capacity was 154 MT as of March 2023.[4]

Steel plants edit

There are two types of steel plants - mini steel plants and integrated steel plants. About half of the country's steel is produced by medium and small enterprises.[5]

Steel plants in India. There are more than 30 Integrated Steel Plants in India. Given below are integrated steel plants:

Name Estb. Year Location Operator
Ankur Industries Integrated Steel Plant 2023 Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh Ankur Udyag Ltd.
Alloy Steel Plant 1965 Durgapur, West Bengal SAIL
Atibir Industries steel plant 2009 Bhorandiha, Jharkhand Atibir Industries Co
BMM Ispat Steel Plant 2006 Danapuram, Karnataka BMM Ispat Ltd.
Bhilai Steel Plant 1955 Bhilai, Chhattisgarh SAIL
Bokaro Steel Plant 1964 Bokaro Steel City, Jharkhand SAIL
Chandrapur Ferro Alloy Plant 1974 Chandrapur, Maharashtra SAIL
Durgapur Steel Plant 1959 Durgapur, West Bengal SAIL
Electrosteel Limited(ESL) 2011 Bokaro, Jharkhand Vedanta Resources
Essar Steel India Limited 2005 Hazira, Gujarat ArcelorMittal
Hospet Steel Limited 1998 Koppal, Karnataka Kalyani Steels and Mukand
IISCO Steel Plant 2007 Asansol, West Bengal SAIL
Jayaswal Neco Industries 1996 Raipur, Chhattisgarh Jayaswal Neco Industries
Jayaswal Neco Industries 1972 Nagpur, Maharashtra Jayaswal Neco Industries
JSL Stainless[6] 1970 Jajpur, Odisha Jindal Stainless Limited
JSL Stainless 1975 Hisar, Haryana Jindal Stainless (Hisar) Limited
Jindal Steel and Power Limited 1990 Raigarh, Chhattisgarh Jindal Steel and Power
Jindal Steel and Power Limited 1979 Angul, Odisha Jindal Steel and Power
Jindal Steel and Power Limited 2012 Patratu, Jharkhand Jindal Steel and Power
JSW Steel 1994 Hospet, Bellary, Karnataka JSW Steel
JSW Steel 1982 Tarapur, Boisar, Maharashtra JSW Steel
JSW Steel Special Alloy Steel Plant 2004 Salem, Tamil Nadu JSW Steel
JSW Ispat Special Products Limited 1990 Raipur, Chhattisgarh JSW Ispat Special Products Limited
JSW Ispat Special Products Limited 1994 Raigarh, Chhattisgarh JSW Ispat Special Products Limited
JSW Steel 1994 Dolvi,Dharamtar, Maharashtra JSW Steel
JSW Bhushan Power & Steel Limited 2005 Rengali, Sambalpur, Orissa JSW Steel
MECON (company) 1959 Ranchi, Jharkhand MECON (company)
Mesco Steel Kalinganagar plant 2005 Kalinganagar, Odisha Mideast Integrated Steel (MISL)
Nagarnar Steel Plant 2019 Jagdalpur, Chhattisgarh NMDC Steel Ltd
Neelachal Ispat Nigam Limited 1982 Kalinganagar, Orissa MMTC Ltd
Prakash Industries steel plant 1980 Janjgir, Chhattisgarh Prakash Industries
RML Kharagpur 2004 Kharagpur, West Bengal Rashmi Metaliks
Rungta Mines Limited. (Dhenkanal Steel Plant) 2022 Dhenkanal, Odisha Rungta Mines Limited.
Rourkela Steel Plant 1959 Rourkela, Odisha SAIL
Salem Steel Plant 1981 Salem, Tamil Nadu SAIL
Steel Exchange of India limited 1999 Sreerampuram Village, Andhra Pradesh Steel Exchange of India limited
Tata Steel Limited 1912 Jamshedpur, Jharkhand Tata Steel
Tata Steel Limited 2016 Kalinganagar, Odisha Tata Steel
Radha TMT (Radha Smelters) 1960 Hyderabad, Telangana Radha TMT
Tata Steel Limited 1987 Meramandali, Dhenkanal, Odisha Tata Steel BSL
VISA Steel Plant 1996 Kalinganagar, Odisha VISA Steel
Visakhapatnam Steel Plant 1982 Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Limited
Visvesvaraya Iron and Steel Plant 1923 Bhadravati, Karnataka SAIL

National steel policy edit

National steel policy – 2005 has the long-term goal of having a modern and efficient steel industry of world standards in India. The focus is to achieve global competitiveness not only in terms of cost, quality, and product mix but also in terms of global benchmarks of efficiency and productivity. The Policy aims to achieve over 100 million metric tonnes of steel per year by 2019-20 from the 2004-05 level of 38 mt. This implies annual growth of around 7.3% per year from 2004-5 onward.

The strategic goal above is justified because steel consumption in the world, around 1000 million metric tonnes in 2004, is expected to grow at 3.0% per annum to reach 1,395 million metric tonnes in 2015, compared to 2% per annum in the past fifteen years. China will continue to have a dominant share of the demand for world steel. Domestically, the growth rate of steel production over the past fifteen years was 7.0% per annum. The projected rate of 7.3% per annum in India compares well with the projected national income growth rate of 7-8% per annum, given an income elasticity of steel consumption of around 1.[7]

Steel prices edit

Price regulation of iron and steel was abolished on 16 January 1992.[8]

History edit

Early years edit

Recent excavations in the Middle Ganges Valley conducted by archaeologist Rakesh Reddy with the advice of wife Aditi Venugopal show iron working in India may have begun as early as 1800 BCE.[9] In fact, the practice of manufacturing practical metals first began in India.[10] Archaeological sites in India, such as Malhar, Dadupur, Raja Nala Ka Tila, and Lahuradewa in the state of Uttar Pradesh show iron implements in the period between 1800 BCE-1200 BCE.[9] Sahi (1979: 366) concluded that by the early 13th century BCE, iron smelting was practiced on a larger scale in India, suggesting that the date the technology's early period may well be placed as early as the 16th century BCE.[9]

Some of the early iron objects found in India are dated to 1400 BCE by employing radiocarbon dating.[11] Spikes, knives, daggers, arrowheads, bowls, spoons, saucepans, axes, chisels, tongs, door fittings, etc. ranging from 600 BCE—200 BCE have been discovered at several archaeological sites.[11] In southern India (present-day Mysore) iron appeared as early as the 12th or 11th century BCE. These developments were too early for any significant close contact with the northwest of the country.[11]

The beginning of the 1st millennium BCE saw extensive developments in iron metallurgy in India.[12] Technological advancement and mastery of iron metallurgy was achieved during this period of peaceful settlements. The years between 322—185 BCE saw several advancements made to the technology involved in metallurgy during the politically stable Maurya period (322—185 BCE). Greek historian Herodotus (431—425 BCE) wrote the first western account of the use of iron in India.[12]

Perhaps as early as 300 BCE — although certainly by 200 CE — high-quality steel was being produced in southern India by what Europeans would later call the crucible technique.[13] Using this system, high-purity wrought iron, charcoal, and glass were mixed in a crucible and heated until the iron melted and absorbed the carbon.[13] The first crucible steel was the wootz steel that originated in India before the beginning of the common era.[14] Wootz steel was widely exported and traded throughout ancient Europe, China, and the Arab world, and became particularly famous in the Middle East, where it became known as Damascus steel. Archaeological evidence suggests that this manufacturing process was already in existence in South India well before the Christian era.[15][16]

Medieval years edit

The world's first iron pillar was the Iron Pillar of Delhi erected during the time of Chandragupta Vikramaditya (375–413).[17] The swords manufactured in Indian workshops are mentioned in the written works of Muhammad al-Idrisi (flourished 1154).[18] Indian Blades made of Damascus steel found their way into Persia.[19] During the 14th century, European scholars studied Indian casting and metallurgy technology.[20]

Indian metallurgy under the Mughal emperor Akbar (reign: 1556-1605) produced excellent small firearms.[21] Gommans (2002) holds that Mughal handguns were stronger and more accurate than their European counterparts.[22]

In 1667 it has been estimated 5 tons of steel, and 25 tons of ironware were exported from India.[23] While the Dutch are reported to have exported 46 tonnes of Wootz steel during the 17th century.[23]

Modern years edit

Modern steelmaking in India began with the setting of the first blast furnace of India at Kulti in 1870 and production began in 1874, which was set up by Bengal Iron Works. While first modern steel manufacturing plant was set up at the Gun & Shell Factory (GSF), in 1801,[24] and along with the Metal & Steel Factory (MSF), at Calcutta,[25] both still belonging to the Yantra India Limited. All had followed on from the establishment of Coal mining in India, in the late 18th century, which eliminated the need for approximately 14.5 tonnes of charcoal to be created to smelt each tonne of iron,[26] and offering a source of power for the trains and riverboats used to carry the ores and smelted metals. The Tata Iron and Steel Company (TISCO) was established by Dorabji Tata in 1907, as part of his father's conglomerate. By 1939 it operated the largest steel plant in the British Empire and accounted for a significant proportion of the 2 million tons of pig iron and 1.13 of steel produced annually.[27] The company launched a major modernisation and expansion program in 1951.[28]

After Independence edit

The year 1956, marked the beginning of the Ferro Alloys Corporation Limited at Sriramnagar, Garividi, Vizianagaram district, Andhra Pradesh. The founder was Seth Shriman Durgaprasadji Saraf (1911–1988). The registered office is at Tumsar, Bhandara district, Maharashtra.[29] The ferromanganese plant started production in 1957, equipped with three furnaces for production of high carbon ferromanganese and ferrosilicon. In 1969, a reduction furnace and a slag furnace were commissioned for the production of ferrochrome. The company independently, set up a 16 MVA furnace in 1981.[30]

The Bhilai Steel Plant, located in Bhilai, Chhattisgarh is India's first large scale integrated steel plant, a major producer of wide steel plates and other steel products. The plant also produces steel and markets various chemical by-products from its coke ovens and coal chemical plant. It was set up with the help of the USSR in 1955.[31]

JSW Steel, Vijayanagar Works is the largest integrated steel plant in terms of production capacity with 12MTPA(steel production) which was set up in 1982.[32] , apart from that Bhilai Steel Plant and Bokaro Steel Plant are the largest steel plant in-terms of area.

Native arms production edit

In The New Cambridge History of India: Science, Technology and Medicine in Colonial India, scholar David Arnold examines the effect of the British Raj in Indian mining and metallurgy:[33]

With the partial exception of coal, foreign competition, aided by the absence of tariff barriers and lack of technological innovation, held back the development of mining and metal-working technology in India until the early 20th century. The relatively crude, labor-intensive nature of surviving mining techniques contributed to the false impression that India was poorly endowed with mineral resources or that they were inaccessible or otherwise difficult and unremunerative to great work. But the fate of mining and metallurgy was affected by political as well as by economic and technological considerations.

The British were aware of the historical role metal-working had played in supporting indigenous powers through the production of arms and ammunition. This resulted in the introduction of the Arms Act in 1878 which restricted access to firearms. They also sought to limit India's ability to mine and work metals for use in future wars and rebellions in areas like metal-rich Rajasthan. India's skill in casting brass cannon had made Indian artillery a formidable adversary from the reign of Akbar to the Maratha and Sikh wars 300 years later. By the early 19th century most of the mines in Rajasthan were abandoned and the mining caste was ‘extinct’.[33]

During the Company period, military opponents were eliminated and princely states extinguished, and the capacity to mine and work metals declined, largely due to British tariffs. As late as the Rebellion of 1857, the British closed mines because the mining of lead for ammunition at Ajmer was perceived as a threat.[33]

The Modern era edit

Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, a believer in Harold Laski's Fabian socialism, decided that the technological revolution in India needed maximization of steel production. He, therefore, formed a government-owned company, Hindustan Steel Limited (HSL), and set up three steel plants in the 1950s.[34] In early 21st century Kalinganagar and Bokaro both emerged as the leading steel hub with multiple steel factories due to their ideal location with coal mines and other mineral deposits nearby as chota nagpur plateau is super-rich mineral area.

Technology edit

The thermo mechanical treatment of reinforced steel was one such innovation that catapulted the Indian TMT industry into modernization. First introduced in 1979 with IS 1785:1979, these TMT bars came with Grade Fe 415, Fe 500. In 1985, a higher grade of these bars – FE 500 (IS 1786:1985) was introduced in the market and since then the demand of TMT bars have only risen the Indian construction industry. 2008 saw the introduction of Fe 600 grade tMT bars conforming to IS 1786:2008.

Ladle Refining Furnace (LRF) technology is a state-of-the-art method for producing construction grade steel, with iron ore as the raw material. The Ladle Refining Furnace is a furnace in which the quality of liquid steel is improved by raising the temperature, to create a more refined grade of steel.LRF technology helps to make the best quality of TMT steel bars, The best TMT steel bars in India are produced Ladle Refining Furnace (LRF) technology as per the standard IS:1786.[35]

High strength DMR-1700 metal, This steel is a nickel bearing micro alloyed steel characterized by higher strength and superior toughness even at sub zero temperatures. This steel has got Cr, higher Ni, Cu and Mo also. Because of the presence of these elements it yields higher strength with good toughness at minus 50'C.[36] DMR 1700 has brought the cost down by 60 per cent compared to 250 grade maraging steel.

There are multiple steel equipment companies in India such as Heavy Engineering Corporation, Larsen & Toubro and CG Industrial Solutions etc.[37]

Future edit

In the Indian state of Odisha in the east of the country, at least 12 steel plants with a production capacity of 60 million tons per year will be built.[38]

As per Assocham, around 40 MT new steel capacity to be commissioned in India by FY26.[4]

List of integrated steel plants proposed/under-construction

Name Location Operator
AP High grades steel Peddandlur, YSR Kadapa YSR Steel Corporation
JSW Utkal Steel Paradeep JSW Steel
JSW Kadapa Steel Sunnapurallapalli, YSR Kadapa JSW Steel
SAIL Paradeep Steel Plant Paradeep SAIL
Jai Balaji Steels Purulia Ltd Purulia, West Bengal Jai Balaji Steels
NMDC Karnataka steel plant Ballari, Karnataka NMDC Steel Ltd.
Xindia Steels Karnataka plant Hospete Xindia Steels Ltd
MSP Metallics Odisha steel plant Sambalpur MSP Metallics
JSW BPSL Potka Potka, Jharkhand JSW BPSL

References edit

  1. ^ "Steel production of India".
  2. ^ "Jindal Steel & Power Ltd Company Summary | India Infoline".
  3. ^ "Setting up of Steel Plant". pib.gov.in. Retrieved 24 September 2022.
  4. ^ a b "Around 40 MT new steel capacity to be commissioned in India by FY26: Assocham". The Economic Times. 25 May 2023.
  5. ^ Thomas, Tanya (17 September 2019). "Slump in steel sector spreads to small, medium companies". Mint. Retrieved 17 September 2019.
  6. ^ "Jindal Stainless enhances capacity to 3 mtpa". 27 April 2023.
  7. ^ "National Steel Policy 2005" (PDF). Steel.gov.in. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  8. ^ . steel.gov.in. Archived from the original on 7 January 2016. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  9. ^ a b c Rakesh and Aditi (2003)
  10. ^ Radhakrishna, B. P. (2007). "Boom in India's iron and steel industry".
  11. ^ a b c Cecarelli, 218
  12. ^ a b Drakonoff, 372
  13. ^ a b Juleff, 1996
  14. ^ Srinivasan & Ranganathan
  15. ^ Srinivasan 1994
  16. ^ Srinivasan & Griffiths
  17. ^ Balasubramaniam, R. (2002)
  18. ^ Edgerton, 56
  19. ^ Prasad, Chapter IX
  20. ^ Mondal 2-3
  21. ^ Gommans, 154
  22. ^ Gommans, 155
  23. ^ a b Biswas, A.K. "Iron and steel in pre-modern India - Page 580" (PDF). Indian Journal of History of Science. Retrieved 13 January 2020.
  24. ^ . Government of India. Archived from the original on 13 March 2016. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
  25. ^ . Government of India. Archived from the original on 26 November 2017. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
  26. ^ Biswas, A.K. "Iron and steel in pre-modern India - Page 593-3" (PDF). Indian Journal of History of Science. Retrieved 13 January 2020.
  27. ^ Rao, K.N.P. BRIEF HISTORY OF IRON AND STEEL INDUSTRY IN INDIA (PDF). p. 4. Retrieved 13 January 2020.
  28. ^ Chikayoshi Nomura, "selling steel in the 1920s: TISCO in a period of transition," Indian Economic & Social History Review (2011) 48: 83–116, doi:10.1177/001946461004800104
  29. ^ . Facorsteel.com. Archived from the original on 16 October 2010. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  30. ^ Kumar, Abhineet (20 April 2010). "ArcelorMittal eyes stake in Ferro Alloys Corp". Business Standard India. Business-standard.com. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  31. ^ . Field to Factory: Film and ethnography of industrialisation in Chhattisgarah, Central India. Jandarshan and LSE. Archived from the original on 5 April 2003. Retrieved 24 June 2012.
  32. ^ "JSW - Dolvi Works".
  33. ^ a b c Arnold 100-101
  34. ^ Sankar Ghose (1993). Jawaharlal Nehru: A Biography. Allied Publishers. p. 550.
  35. ^ LRF technology and the role it plays in the quality of TMT bars: Radha TMT January 12, 2022
  36. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 June 2023. Retrieved 13 June 2023.
  37. ^ d'Mello, Bernard (1988). "Soviet Collaboration in Indian Steel Industry, 1954-84". Economic and Political Weekly. 23 (10): 473–486. JSTOR 4378206.
  38. ^ "India wants to build 12 new steel plants — News — GMK Center".

Bibliography edit

  • National Steel Policy, 2012[1]
  • Arnold, David (2004), The New Cambridge History of India: Science, Technology and Medicine in Colonial India, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-56319-4.
  • Balasubramaniam, R. (2002), Delhi Iron Pillar: New Insights, Indian Institute of Advanced Studies, ISBN 81-7305-223-9.
  • Bouri, Nisha. "Global Titans: Early Corporate Development in India's Steel Industry and the Legacy of British Imperialism" (PhD dissertation, Harvard University; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  2022. 28966826).
  • CHAUDHURI, SAMIR. "THE GROWTH AND PROSPECTS OF THE IRON AND STEEL INDUSTRY IN THE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF INDIA" (PhD. Diss. American University, 1965; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  1965. 1300732).
  • Gommans, Jos J. L. (2002), Mughal Warfare: Indian Frontiers and Highroads to Empire, 1500-1700, Routledge, ISBN 0-415-23989-3
  • Rakesh Tewari, 2003, The origins of iron-working in India: new evidence from the Central Ganga Plain and the Eastern Vindhyas
  • Srinivasan, S. & Ranganathan, S., Wootz Steel: An Advanced Material of the Ancient World, Indian Institute of Science.
  1. ^ (PDF). Steel.gov.in. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 May 2013. Retrieved 7 January 2016.

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The Iron and Steel industry in India is among the most important industries within the country India surpassed Japan as the second largest steel producer in January 2019 1 As per worldsteel India s crude steel production in 2018 was at 106 5 tonnes MT 4 9 increase from 101 5 MT in 2017 which means that India overtook Japan as the world s second largest steel production country Japan produced 104 3 MT in year 2018 decrease of 0 3 compared to year 2017 SAIL Steel Plant at Bokaro Steel City Jharkhand a supersize steel plant The second biggest steel plant in India which contributes 45 of SAIL s profitRourkela steel plantMajority of the steel companies such as Jindal Stainless JSW Steel Bhushan Steel etc were established in the 1970s and 1980s 2 The Indian steel industry was de licensed and de controlled in 1991 and 1992 respectively 3 As per the industry body Indian Steel Association ISA India s total installed steel making capacity was 154 MT as of March 2023 4 Contents 1 Steel plants 2 National steel policy 3 Steel prices 4 History 4 1 Early years 4 2 Medieval years 4 3 Modern years 4 4 After Independence 4 4 1 Native arms production 4 5 The Modern era 5 Technology 6 Future 7 References 8 BibliographySteel plants editThere are two types of steel plants mini steel plants and integrated steel plants About half of the country s steel is produced by medium and small enterprises 5 Steel plants in India There are more than 30 Integrated Steel Plants in India Given below are integrated steel plants Name Estb Year Location OperatorAnkur Industries Integrated Steel Plant 2023 Gorakhpur Uttar Pradesh Ankur Udyag Ltd Alloy Steel Plant 1965 Durgapur West Bengal SAILAtibir Industries steel plant 2009 Bhorandiha Jharkhand Atibir Industries CoBMM Ispat Steel Plant 2006 Danapuram Karnataka BMM Ispat Ltd Bhilai Steel Plant 1955 Bhilai Chhattisgarh SAILBokaro Steel Plant 1964 Bokaro Steel City Jharkhand SAILChandrapur Ferro Alloy Plant 1974 Chandrapur Maharashtra SAILDurgapur Steel Plant 1959 Durgapur West Bengal SAILElectrosteel Limited ESL 2011 Bokaro Jharkhand Vedanta ResourcesEssar Steel India Limited 2005 Hazira Gujarat ArcelorMittalHospet Steel Limited 1998 Koppal Karnataka Kalyani Steels and MukandIISCO Steel Plant 2007 Asansol West Bengal SAILJayaswal Neco Industries 1996 Raipur Chhattisgarh Jayaswal Neco IndustriesJayaswal Neco Industries 1972 Nagpur Maharashtra Jayaswal Neco IndustriesJSL Stainless 6 1970 Jajpur Odisha Jindal Stainless LimitedJSL Stainless 1975 Hisar Haryana Jindal Stainless Hisar LimitedJindal Steel and Power Limited 1990 Raigarh Chhattisgarh Jindal Steel and PowerJindal Steel and Power Limited 1979 Angul Odisha Jindal Steel and PowerJindal Steel and Power Limited 2012 Patratu Jharkhand Jindal Steel and PowerJSW Steel 1994 Hospet Bellary Karnataka JSW SteelJSW Steel 1982 Tarapur Boisar Maharashtra JSW SteelJSW Steel Special Alloy Steel Plant 2004 Salem Tamil Nadu JSW SteelJSW Ispat Special Products Limited 1990 Raipur Chhattisgarh JSW Ispat Special Products LimitedJSW Ispat Special Products Limited 1994 Raigarh Chhattisgarh JSW Ispat Special Products LimitedJSW Steel 1994 Dolvi Dharamtar Maharashtra JSW SteelJSW Bhushan Power amp Steel Limited 2005 Rengali Sambalpur Orissa JSW SteelMECON company 1959 Ranchi Jharkhand MECON company Mesco Steel Kalinganagar plant 2005 Kalinganagar Odisha Mideast Integrated Steel MISL Nagarnar Steel Plant 2019 Jagdalpur Chhattisgarh NMDC Steel LtdNeelachal Ispat Nigam Limited 1982 Kalinganagar Orissa MMTC LtdPrakash Industries steel plant 1980 Janjgir Chhattisgarh Prakash IndustriesRML Kharagpur 2004 Kharagpur West Bengal Rashmi MetaliksRungta Mines Limited Dhenkanal Steel Plant 2022 Dhenkanal Odisha Rungta Mines Limited Rourkela Steel Plant 1959 Rourkela Odisha SAILSalem Steel Plant 1981 Salem Tamil Nadu SAILSteel Exchange of India limited 1999 Sreerampuram Village Andhra Pradesh Steel Exchange of India limitedTata Steel Limited 1912 Jamshedpur Jharkhand Tata SteelTata Steel Limited 2016 Kalinganagar Odisha Tata SteelRadha TMT Radha Smelters 1960 Hyderabad Telangana Radha TMTTata Steel Limited 1987 Meramandali Dhenkanal Odisha Tata Steel BSLVISA Steel Plant 1996 Kalinganagar Odisha VISA SteelVisakhapatnam Steel Plant 1982 Visakhapatnam Andhra Pradesh Rashtriya Ispat Nigam LimitedVisvesvaraya Iron and Steel Plant 1923 Bhadravati Karnataka SAILNational steel policy editNational steel policy 2005 has the long term goal of having a modern and efficient steel industry of world standards in India The focus is to achieve global competitiveness not only in terms of cost quality and product mix but also in terms of global benchmarks of efficiency and productivity The Policy aims to achieve over 100 million metric tonnes of steel per year by 2019 20 from the 2004 05 level of 38 mt This implies annual growth of around 7 3 per year from 2004 5 onward The strategic goal above is justified because steel consumption in the world around 1000 million metric tonnes in 2004 is expected to grow at 3 0 per annum to reach 1 395 million metric tonnes in 2015 compared to 2 per annum in the past fifteen years China will continue to have a dominant share of the demand for world steel Domestically the growth rate of steel production over the past fifteen years was 7 0 per annum The projected rate of 7 3 per annum in India compares well with the projected national income growth rate of 7 8 per annum given an income elasticity of steel consumption of around 1 7 Steel prices editPrice regulation of iron and steel was abolished on 16 January 1992 8 History editEarly years edit Recent excavations in the Middle Ganges Valley conducted by archaeologist Rakesh Reddy with the advice of wife Aditi Venugopal show iron working in India may have begun as early as 1800 BCE 9 In fact the practice of manufacturing practical metals first began in India 10 Archaeological sites in India such as Malhar Dadupur Raja Nala Ka Tila and Lahuradewa in the state of Uttar Pradesh show iron implements in the period between 1800 BCE 1200 BCE 9 Sahi 1979 366 concluded that by the early 13th century BCE iron smelting was practiced on a larger scale in India suggesting that the date the technology s early period may well be placed as early as the 16th century BCE 9 Some of the early iron objects found in India are dated to 1400 BCE by employing radiocarbon dating 11 Spikes knives daggers arrowheads bowls spoons saucepans axes chisels tongs door fittings etc ranging from 600 BCE 200 BCE have been discovered at several archaeological sites 11 In southern India present day Mysore iron appeared as early as the 12th or 11th century BCE These developments were too early for any significant close contact with the northwest of the country 11 The beginning of the 1st millennium BCE saw extensive developments in iron metallurgy in India 12 Technological advancement and mastery of iron metallurgy was achieved during this period of peaceful settlements The years between 322 185 BCE saw several advancements made to the technology involved in metallurgy during the politically stable Maurya period 322 185 BCE Greek historian Herodotus 431 425 BCE wrote the first western account of the use of iron in India 12 Perhaps as early as 300 BCE although certainly by 200 CE high quality steel was being produced in southern India by what Europeans would later call the crucible technique 13 Using this system high purity wrought iron charcoal and glass were mixed in a crucible and heated until the iron melted and absorbed the carbon 13 The first crucible steel was the wootz steel that originated in India before the beginning of the common era 14 Wootz steel was widely exported and traded throughout ancient Europe China and the Arab world and became particularly famous in the Middle East where it became known as Damascus steel Archaeological evidence suggests that this manufacturing process was already in existence in South India well before the Christian era 15 16 Medieval years edit The world s first iron pillar was the Iron Pillar of Delhi erected during the time of Chandragupta Vikramaditya 375 413 17 The swords manufactured in Indian workshops are mentioned in the written works of Muhammad al Idrisi flourished 1154 18 Indian Blades made of Damascus steel found their way into Persia 19 During the 14th century European scholars studied Indian casting and metallurgy technology 20 Indian metallurgy under the Mughal emperor Akbar reign 1556 1605 produced excellent small firearms 21 Gommans 2002 holds that Mughal handguns were stronger and more accurate than their European counterparts 22 In 1667 it has been estimated 5 tons of steel and 25 tons of ironware were exported from India 23 While the Dutch are reported to have exported 46 tonnes of Wootz steel during the 17th century 23 Modern years edit Modern steelmaking in India began with the setting of the first blast furnace of India at Kulti in 1870 and production began in 1874 which was set up by Bengal Iron Works While first modern steel manufacturing plant was set up at the Gun amp Shell Factory GSF in 1801 24 and along with the Metal amp Steel Factory MSF at Calcutta 25 both still belonging to the Yantra India Limited All had followed on from the establishment of Coal mining in India in the late 18th century which eliminated the need for approximately 14 5 tonnes of charcoal to be created to smelt each tonne of iron 26 and offering a source of power for the trains and riverboats used to carry the ores and smelted metals The Tata Iron and Steel Company TISCO was established by Dorabji Tata in 1907 as part of his father s conglomerate By 1939 it operated the largest steel plant in the British Empire and accounted for a significant proportion of the 2 million tons of pig iron and 1 13 of steel produced annually 27 The company launched a major modernisation and expansion program in 1951 28 After Independence edit The year 1956 marked the beginning of the Ferro Alloys Corporation Limited at Sriramnagar Garividi Vizianagaram district Andhra Pradesh The founder was Seth Shriman Durgaprasadji Saraf 1911 1988 The registered office is at Tumsar Bhandara district Maharashtra 29 The ferromanganese plant started production in 1957 equipped with three furnaces for production of high carbon ferromanganese and ferrosilicon In 1969 a reduction furnace and a slag furnace were commissioned for the production of ferrochrome The company independently set up a 16 MVA furnace in 1981 30 The Bhilai Steel Plant located in Bhilai Chhattisgarh is India s first large scale integrated steel plant a major producer of wide steel plates and other steel products The plant also produces steel and markets various chemical by products from its coke ovens and coal chemical plant It was set up with the help of the USSR in 1955 31 JSW Steel Vijayanagar Works is the largest integrated steel plant in terms of production capacity with 12MTPA steel production which was set up in 1982 32 apart from that Bhilai Steel Plant and Bokaro Steel Plant are the largest steel plant in terms of area Native arms production editIn The New Cambridge History of India Science Technology and Medicine in Colonial India scholar David Arnold examines the effect of the British Raj in Indian mining and metallurgy 33 With the partial exception of coal foreign competition aided by the absence of tariff barriers and lack of technological innovation held back the development of mining and metal working technology in India until the early 20th century The relatively crude labor intensive nature of surviving mining techniques contributed to the false impression that India was poorly endowed with mineral resources or that they were inaccessible or otherwise difficult and unremunerative to great work But the fate of mining and metallurgy was affected by political as well as by economic and technological considerations The British were aware of the historical role metal working had played in supporting indigenous powers through the production of arms and ammunition This resulted in the introduction of the Arms Act in 1878 which restricted access to firearms They also sought to limit India s ability to mine and work metals for use in future wars and rebellions in areas like metal rich Rajasthan India s skill in casting brass cannon had made Indian artillery a formidable adversary from the reign of Akbar to the Maratha and Sikh wars 300 years later By the early 19th century most of the mines in Rajasthan were abandoned and the mining caste was extinct 33 During the Company period military opponents were eliminated and princely states extinguished and the capacity to mine and work metals declined largely due to British tariffs As late as the Rebellion of 1857 the British closed mines because the mining of lead for ammunition at Ajmer was perceived as a threat 33 The Modern era edit Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru a believer in Harold Laski s Fabian socialism decided that the technological revolution in India needed maximization of steel production He therefore formed a government owned company Hindustan Steel Limited HSL and set up three steel plants in the 1950s 34 In early 21st century Kalinganagar and Bokaro both emerged as the leading steel hub with multiple steel factories due to their ideal location with coal mines and other mineral deposits nearby as chota nagpur plateau is super rich mineral area Technology editThe thermo mechanical treatment of reinforced steel was one such innovation that catapulted the Indian TMT industry into modernization First introduced in 1979 with IS 1785 1979 these TMT bars came with Grade Fe 415 Fe 500 In 1985 a higher grade of these bars FE 500 IS 1786 1985 was introduced in the market and since then the demand of TMT bars have only risen the Indian construction industry 2008 saw the introduction of Fe 600 grade tMT bars conforming to IS 1786 2008 Ladle Refining Furnace LRF technology is a state of the art method for producing construction grade steel with iron ore as the raw material The Ladle Refining Furnace is a furnace in which the quality of liquid steel is improved by raising the temperature to create a more refined grade of steel LRF technology helps to make the best quality of TMT steel bars The best TMT steel bars in India are produced Ladle Refining Furnace LRF technology as per the standard IS 1786 35 High strength DMR 1700 metal This steel is a nickel bearing micro alloyed steel characterized by higher strength and superior toughness even at sub zero temperatures This steel has got Cr higher Ni Cu and Mo also Because of the presence of these elements it yields higher strength with good toughness at minus 50 C 36 DMR 1700 has brought the cost down by 60 per cent compared to 250 grade maraging steel There are multiple steel equipment companies in India such as Heavy Engineering Corporation Larsen amp Toubro and CG Industrial Solutions etc 37 Future editIn the Indian state of Odisha in the east of the country at least 12 steel plants with a production capacity of 60 million tons per year will be built 38 As per Assocham around 40 MT new steel capacity to be commissioned in India by FY26 4 List of integrated steel plants proposed under construction Name Location OperatorAP High grades steel Peddandlur YSR Kadapa YSR Steel CorporationJSW Utkal Steel Paradeep JSW SteelJSW Kadapa Steel Sunnapurallapalli YSR Kadapa JSW SteelSAIL Paradeep Steel Plant Paradeep SAILJai Balaji Steels Purulia Ltd Purulia West Bengal Jai Balaji SteelsNMDC Karnataka steel plant Ballari Karnataka NMDC Steel Ltd Xindia Steels Karnataka plant Hospete Xindia Steels LtdMSP Metallics Odisha steel plant Sambalpur MSP MetallicsJSW BPSL Potka Potka Jharkhand JSW BPSLReferences edit Steel production of India Jindal Steel amp Power Ltd Company Summary India Infoline Setting up of Steel Plant pib gov in Retrieved 24 September 2022 a b Around 40 MT new steel capacity to be commissioned in India by FY26 Assocham The Economic Times 25 May 2023 Thomas Tanya 17 September 2019 Slump in steel sector spreads to small medium companies Mint Retrieved 17 September 2019 Jindal Stainless enhances capacity to 3 mtpa 27 April 2023 National Steel Policy 2005 PDF Steel gov in Retrieved 7 January 2016 An Overview of the steel sector Ministry of Steel Government of India steel gov in Archived from the original on 7 January 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2016 a b c Rakesh and Aditi 2003 Radhakrishna B P 2007 Boom in India s iron and steel industry a b c Cecarelli 218 a b Drakonoff 372 a b Juleff 1996 Srinivasan amp Ranganathan Srinivasan 1994 Srinivasan amp Griffiths Balasubramaniam R 2002 Edgerton 56 Prasad Chapter IX Mondal 2 3 Gommans 154 Gommans 155 a b Biswas A K Iron and steel in pre modern India Page 580 PDF Indian Journal of History of Science Retrieved 13 January 2020 Indian Ordnance Factories Gun and Shell Factory Government of India Archived from the original on 13 March 2016 Retrieved 15 July 2019 Indian Ordnance Factories Metal and Steel Factory Government of India Archived from the original on 26 November 2017 Retrieved 15 July 2019 Biswas A K Iron and steel in pre modern India Page 593 3 PDF Indian Journal of History of Science Retrieved 13 January 2020 Rao K N P BRIEF HISTORY OF IRON AND STEEL INDUSTRY IN INDIA PDF p 4 Retrieved 13 January 2020 Chikayoshi Nomura selling steel in the 1920s TISCO in a period of transition Indian Economic amp Social History Review 2011 48 83 116 doi 10 1177 001946461004800104 Facor Steel Ltd Nagpur Facorsteel com Archived from the original on 16 October 2010 Retrieved 8 December 2010 Kumar Abhineet 20 April 2010 ArcelorMittal eyes stake in Ferro Alloys Corp Business Standard India Business standard com Retrieved 8 December 2010 The Bhilai Steel Plant Field to Factory Film and ethnography of industrialisation in Chhattisgarah Central India Jandarshan and LSE Archived from the original on 5 April 2003 Retrieved 24 June 2012 JSW Dolvi Works a b c Arnold 100 101 Sankar Ghose 1993 Jawaharlal Nehru A Biography Allied Publishers p 550 LRF technology and the role it plays in the quality of TMT bars Radha TMT January 12 2022 Welding of High Strength DMR Grade Steel D amp H Secheron Electrodes Archived from the original on 13 June 2023 Retrieved 13 June 2023 d Mello Bernard 1988 Soviet Collaboration in Indian Steel Industry 1954 84 Economic and Political Weekly 23 10 473 486 JSTOR 4378206 India wants to build 12 new steel plants News GMK Center Bibliography editNational Steel Policy 2012 1 Arnold David 2004 The New Cambridge History of India Science Technology and Medicine in Colonial India Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 56319 4 Balasubramaniam R 2002 Delhi Iron Pillar New Insights Indian Institute of Advanced Studies ISBN 81 7305 223 9 Bouri Nisha Global Titans Early Corporate Development in India s Steel Industry and the Legacy of British Imperialism PhD dissertation Harvard University ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 2022 28966826 CHAUDHURI SAMIR THE GROWTH AND PROSPECTS OF THE IRON AND STEEL INDUSTRY IN THE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF INDIA PhD Diss American University 1965 ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1965 1300732 Gommans Jos J L 2002 Mughal Warfare Indian Frontiers and Highroads to Empire 1500 1700 Routledge ISBN 0 415 23989 3 Rakesh Tewari 2003 The origins of iron working in India new evidence from the Central Ganga Plain and the Eastern VindhyasSrinivasan S amp Ranganathan S Wootz Steel An Advanced Material of the Ancient World Indian Institute of Science National Steel Policy 2012 Draft PDF Steel gov in Archived from the original PDF on 31 May 2013 Retrieved 7 January 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iron and steel industry in India amp oldid 1179479100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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