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ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih

ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih (former Kryvorizhstal; Ukrainian: Криворіжсталь) is Ukraine's largest integrated steel company, founded in 1934 and located in Kryvyi Rih, in central Ukraine.

ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih
Native name
АрселорМіттал Кривий Ріг
Company typepublic joint-stock company (PJSC)
IndustrySteel
Founded1934[1]
Headquarters,
Ukraine
Key people
Mauro Longobardo (CEO)[2]
ProductsSteel, hot metal, rolled products
Number of employees
over 22,000 (2022)
ParentArcelorMittal
Websiteukraine.arcelormittal.com
Wire rod production at ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih, 2017

Bought in 2005 by Mittal Steel, the steel plant is one of the most important Ukrainian companies and a globally important steel producer. In Ukraine it is the largest steel manufacturer of both rebar and wire rod. ArcelorMittal Kryviy Rih also specializes in the manufacture of sections, angles, strips and billets.


Background edit

The presence of iron ore in the regions around Kryvyi Rih has been confirmed since at least 1781 and was rumored to have existed long before[1] by generations of inhabitants. Throughout the 1800s, the region was surveyed for its mineral wealth. Iron ore of 70% iron content and manganese ores were located. In 1881, industrial extraction of iron ore began, alongside other developments such as the construction of the Kryvyi Rih railway. By 1884, over 100,000 tons of iron ore had been extracted, and the railway though Kryvyi Rih, 477 versts (505,6 km) long, from Yasynuvata station via Kryvyi Rih to Dolynska station, had been opened.[1] Iron ore production expanded rapidly during the next few years. By 1896, 20 mines in the Kryvyi Rih Basin were producing over 1,000,000 tonnes of ore. Industrial expansion continued in the region up to 1917. Production dropped during the First World War.[1]

Foundation and growth in Soviet Union edit

 
Construction work on a new giant blast furnace iron-melting unit at Lenin Metallurgical Works (Soviet name) in Kryvyi Rih

After the formation of the Soviet Union and expulsion of Austro-Hungarian forces and then anti-communist forces occupying the region under Anton Denikin, relative normalcy resumed.[1] Planning of the plant began in 1929, with the intent to construct an integrated steel plant comprising iron ore and carbon mining to finished steel products.[3] In 1931, the chairman of the Supreme Economic Council of the USSR, Grigori (Sergo) Ordzhonikidze, signed a decree ordering the construction of the facility; that same year, the foundation stone of the metallurgical plant was laid. In August 1934, the first metal was produced at Kryvorizhstal, later known as 'Kryvyi Rih Metallurgical Plant'.[4]

Before the onset of the Second World War, the plant operated with three blast furnaces (of 3,160 m3) and two open hearth furnaces, along with a heat and power plant. In 1941, a blooming mill with a yearly capacity of 1.7 million tonnes, a fourth blast furnace and a third open hearth furnace came online, shortly before the Nazi occupation.[5] Before German troops arrived, equipment and employees were evacuated to Nizhny Tagil, east of the Ural Mountains.[5] During the German occupation from 14 August 1941 to 22 February 1944,[1] what remained of the plant was left in ruins.[6]

After recapturing of the area, the plant was rebuilt and continued its growth. Blast Furnace 7 was built in 1962, and Blast Furnace 8 was completed in 1970, making the plant the largest in Europe. In 1974, Blast Furnace 9 opened,[1] the biggest in the world with a volume of 5,000 m3.[7]

Ukrainian independence edit

In 1996, restructuring took place, combining the mining and ore concentrating unit Novokrivorozhsky HZK (Новокриворізький ГЗК (НК ГЗК)) (NK-HZK) with the Kryvyi Rih State Mining and Metallurgical Combine (Kryvorizhstal) (Криворізького державного гірничо-металургійного комбінату "Криворіжсталь"). Kryvyi Rih coking plant[8] (Криворізький коксохімічний завод (ККХЗ)) was included in the group in 1997,[7] forming "Novokrivorozhsky mining and processing combine and Kryvyi Rih coking plant" (Новокриворізький гірничо-збагачувальний комбінат і Криворізький коксохімічний завод «Криворіжсталь»), or Kryvoriszhstal. This was all on paper, given that the three units had been always been designed to work jointly, and that the facilities were on the same site.

First privatization, 2004 edit

Kryvorizhstal became internationally known when it was privatized in June 2004 for a sum of US$800 million,[9][10] (4.26 billion.[11]) against a government-set reserve price of $714 million,[12] to a consortium called Investment-Metallurgical Union.[7] This consortium included Rinat Akhmetov's SCM and Interpipe Group,[11] controlled by then-President Kuchma's son-in-law Viktor Pinchuk.[10] Higher offers from foreign investors, including a joint bid from Severstal/Arcelor, and a bid from Tata Steel, were rejected on bidding technicalities.[13] The deal was widely criticized by the opposition and from abroad as an example of corruption and state property mismanagement.[10]

On the initiative of newly elected President Viktor Yushchenko, the privatization deal was dismissed by a court in June 2005, and the company sold again in a fair auction.[10]

2005, Second privatisation and ArcelorMittal company edit

At the time of the second privatisation, the company had annual sales of $1897 million with a net profit of $378 million, and cash reserves of $413 million. The plant had a production capacity of ~10 million tonnes of raw steel, and a rolling capacity of under 7 million tonnes, and was able to source most of its requirements for iron ore and coke locally.[14] The bidding process was broadcast live on Ukrainian television,[10] with Arcelor, Mittal Steel and Vadim Novinsky's Smart Holdings bidding - Mittal Steel was the highest bidder and acquired a 93.02 percent stake in Kryvorizhstal on 24 October 2005, for ₴ 24.2 billion, or US$4.81 billion.[10] Mittal Steel was expected to finance the acquisition from its own cash reserves and from a $3 billion loan arranged with UK based Citigroup. The price exceeded analyst predictions of $3 billion,[14] making it the largest privatization deal in the former Soviet Union.[citation needed]

In 2006, the company was renamed Mittal Steel Kryvyi Rih[15] (Ukrainian : ВАТ «Міттал Стіл Кривий Ріг»), and later in 2007, after the takeover of Arcelor by Mittal steel to form ArcelorMittal, the company was renamed ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih.[16]

During the late-2000s financial crisis, steel production dropped from 8.1 million tonnes in 2007[17] to 6.2 million in 2008[18] and 5 million in 2009,[19] with decreases in other production metrics and revenues, with the company registering a net loss of ₴120 million in 2009 (down from a profit of ₴4.7 billion the year before).[20] Production levels recovered to 2008 values in 2010.[21][22]

Investments 2006-2022 edit

Between 2006 and 2022 in Ukraine, the company's total investments amounted to $10 billion (including $ 4.8 billion – take over amount during the privatization + $ 5.2 billion - investment in production development). Major investment projects from 2006 to 2022 included:

  • Reconstruction of Coke Oven Batteries 3 and 4 ($199 million);
  • Category 1 reconstruction of Blast Furnace No. 8 ($127 million);
  • Reconstruction of Oxygen Block 2 ($45 million);
  • Construction of ladle furnace and Continuous Caster Machine 1 ($112 million);
  • Construction of the new packing line at Light Section Mill 2 ($16 million);
  • Category 1 reconstruction of Blast Furnace 6 ($117 million);
  • Pulverized coal injection built at Blast Furnace 9 ($60 million);
  • Reconstruction of Coke Oven Batteries 5 and 6, along with the implementation of environmental measures and an automated environmental monitoring system ($157 million);
  • Modernization of Sinter Shop 2 (over $180 million);
  • Construction of two new continuous Casting Machines 2 and 3 (over $160 million);
  • Reconstruction of Light Section Mill 250-4 (over $60 million);
  • Construction of new gas cleaning plants for Basic Oxygen Furnaces 4, 5, and 6 with СО combustion and implementation of automated environmental monitoring system ($65 million);
  • From 2008 to 2015, approximately $500 million were invested to replenish old crushers, build new sections at the beneficiation plants (total of three sections), purchase new ball mills, modernize the haulage fleet and in-pit equipment, open a new horizon at the Artem underground mine (1 135 m), and reconstruct the tailing ponds.
  • In February 2022 the Russian large-scale invasion of Ukraine caused ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih to put it temporarily on hold several major investment projects, including a pellet plant construction initially slated to open in 2023. The company makes an exception only for those projects without which the production might stop completely. Such an example is the construction of a new tailing dump Tretya Karta, which is vital for the continuation of ore mining and safe storage of production waste. The commissioning of the new tailing dump will make it possible to abandon two old similar facilities and reduce the anthropogenic load on the nearby territories. ArcelorMittal company is investing over $150 million in this project.


Mauro Longobardo was appointed Chief Executive Officer of ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih, effective 18 February 2020.[citation needed]

Production edit

In 2005, the plant produced over 6 MT of crude steel, 5 MT of rolled products and 5.5 MT of hot metal.[23]

Located entirely in Kryvyi Rih, this steel company was built as an integrated mining and steel plant, comprising: an iron ore mine, ore processing factories and two open pits, a coke-processing plant, three sinter shops, steel workshops of different types (two blast furnace shops, blooming facilities) and three metal-rolling workshops.

Production volumes in 2021 were as follows:

  • Ore mining: 24.5 million tons
  • Concentrate: 11 million tons
  • Hot metal: 5.3 million tons
  • Steel: 4.9 million tons
  • Rolled products: 4.6 million tons

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g , kryvyirih.dp.ua, archived from the original on 13 July 2007
  2. ^ "Власники та бенеціфіціари компанії ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih". opendatabot.ua (in Ukrainian). 2023-09-30. Retrieved 2022-12-17.
  3. ^ Парадоксальные воспоминания о будущем КРИВОРОЖСТАЛИ. Bittersweet memories of the future KRYVORIZHSTAL h.ua
  4. ^ "Історія створення "залізного серця" України - "Криворіжсталі" - kryvyi-rih.one". 25 June 2022.
  5. ^ a b N. A. Gurov (July 1979). "Phases of large growth — The 45th anniversary of the Krivorozhstal' plant". Metallurgist. 23 (7). Springer New York: 439–443. doi:10.1007/BF00736640. ISSN 0026-0894. S2CID 137266340. Krivorozhstal' Plant. Translated from Metallurg, No. 7, pp. 6–8, July, 1979.
  6. ^ Кривой Рог - город шахтеров и металлургов 2010-02-26 at the Wayback Machine Kryvyi Rih --city of miners and metallurgists www.krivbassham.org
  7. ^ a b c АрселорМиттал Кривой Рог (Криворожсталь) ArcelorMittal steel (Kryvorizhstal) file.liga.net
  8. ^ КРИВОРОЖСКИЙ КОКСОХИМИЧЕСКИЙ ЗАВОД Kryvyi Rih Coke plant chem2.expoweb.ru
  9. ^ Marat Terterov, ed. (2006), "1. Editor's Introduction - Roses, Oranges and Foreign Investors", Ukraine Since the Orange Revolution: A Business And Investment Review, GMB Publishing Ltd, p. 8, ISBN 184673004X
  10. ^ a b c d e f John Marone (19 March 2010), "Monopolies thrive as toothless state bows to moguls", www.kyivpost.com, Kyiv Post
  11. ^ a b Чистая прибыль "Криворожстали" составила 2012,610 млн. гривен, ukrrudprom.com (in Russian), 15 June 2005
  12. ^ Alex Nicholson (14 May 2004), "Severstal Warns Kiev Over Major Sell-Off", www.themoscowtimes.com, The Moscow Times, Ukraine has set a minimum bid of $714 million for 93.1 percent of Kryvorizhstal, one of Ukraine's few profitable metals companies. It reported pre-tax profits of $302 million last year and has a capacity of 6 million tons of rolled steel, 7 million tons of steel and 7.8 million tons of pig iron
  13. ^ Как закалялась "Криворожсталь"!, rosinvest.com (in Russian), 16 August 2005
  14. ^ a b "Mittal buys Ukraine's Kryvorizhstal for 4.81 bln usd - UPDATE", www.forbes.com, AFX News Limited via Forbes, 24 October 2005[dead link]
  15. ^ Krivorozhstal renamed as Mittal Steel Kryvyi Rih 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine 14 January 2006, via steelguru.com
  16. ^ "Mittal Steel Kryvyi Rih" renamed for "ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih" 22.06.2007 www.kmu.gov.ua
  17. ^ "ArcelorMittal Fact Book 2007" (PDF), www.arcelormittal.com, ArcelorMittal, p. 129, June 2007[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ "ArcelorMittal Fact Book 2008" (PDF), www.arcelormittal.com, ArcelorMittal, p. 97, June 2008[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ "ArcelorMittal Fact Book 2009" (PDF), www.arcelormittal.com, ArcelorMittal, p. 97, June 2009[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ "ArcelorMittal Kryviy Rih: overview of 2009", www.arcelormittal.com, ArcelorMittal, 16 March 2009
  21. ^ "ArcelorMittal Fact Book 2010" (PDF), www.arcelormittal.com, ArcelorMittal, p. 30,77, July 2011[permanent dead link]
  22. ^ "OJSC "ArcelorMittal Kryviy Rih" announces its November production results", www.arcelormittal.com, ArcelorMittal, 17 December 2010
  23. ^ "Mittal Steel Company Acquires a 93% Stake in Kryvorizhstal in Ukraine", www.prnewswire.com, Mittal Steel Company NV, 24 Oct 2005

Sources edit

  1. Dan Stern (2011-04-06), "Testing the mettle of Ukraine's steel city", news.bbc.co.uk, BBC World News
  2. Reuters - Major Ukraine steel plant ramps back up - but Russian troops are close 18 May 2022 at the Wayback Machine.] (April 27, 2022);
  3. The CEO of ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih spoke about the Company's operation under quarantine 23 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine.] (31 March 2020);
  4. WPROST - Gigantyczna fabryka wznowi produkcję w mieście Zełenskiego. „To jest symbol. Ukraina żyje” April 27, 2022, at the Wayback Machine.] (02.04.2022);
  5. Il Sole24 Ore - Chi è l’italiano che sta dietro all’acciaio ucraino (May 31, 2022);
  6. Financial Times - Ukraine: the $10bn steel plant at the heart of Russia's economic warfare
  7. The Wall Street Journal - Ukraine's Economy Stabilizes, a Boost Alongside Rapid Military Gains September 26, 2022, at the Wayback Machine.] (September 13, 2022);

External links edit

  • Official site http://ukraine.arcelormittal.com
  • Photos of Coking Plant, Blast Furnace No.9, Iron Ore Strip Mine and Blooming Mill.

47°52′26″N 33°23′50″E / 47.8739°N 33.3972°E / 47.8739; 33.3972

arcelormittal, kryvyi, former, kryvorizhstal, ukrainian, Криворіжсталь, ukraine, largest, integrated, steel, company, founded, 1934, located, kryvyi, central, ukraine, native, nameАрселорМіттал, Кривий, Рігcompany, typepublic, joint, stock, company, pjsc, indu. ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih former Kryvorizhstal Ukrainian Krivorizhstal is Ukraine s largest integrated steel company founded in 1934 and located in Kryvyi Rih in central Ukraine ArcelorMittal Kryvyi RihNative nameArselorMittal Krivij RigCompany typepublic joint stock company PJSC IndustrySteelFounded1934 1 HeadquartersKryvyi Rih UkraineKey peopleMauro Longobardo CEO 2 ProductsSteel hot metal rolled productsNumber of employeesover 22 000 2022 ParentArcelorMittalWebsiteukraine wbr arcelormittal wbr com Wire rod production at ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih 2017 Bought in 2005 by Mittal Steel the steel plant is one of the most important Ukrainian companies and a globally important steel producer In Ukraine it is the largest steel manufacturer of both rebar and wire rod ArcelorMittal Kryviy Rih also specializes in the manufacture of sections angles strips and billets Contents 1 Background 1 1 Foundation and growth in Soviet Union 1 2 Ukrainian independence 1 2 1 First privatization 2004 1 2 2 2005 Second privatisation and ArcelorMittal company 1 3 Investments 2006 2022 2 Production 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Sources 5 External linksBackground editThe presence of iron ore in the regions around Kryvyi Rih has been confirmed since at least 1781 and was rumored to have existed long before 1 by generations of inhabitants Throughout the 1800s the region was surveyed for its mineral wealth Iron ore of 70 iron content and manganese ores were located In 1881 industrial extraction of iron ore began alongside other developments such as the construction of the Kryvyi Rih railway By 1884 over 100 000 tons of iron ore had been extracted and the railway though Kryvyi Rih 477 versts 505 6 km long from Yasynuvata station via Kryvyi Rih to Dolynska station had been opened 1 Iron ore production expanded rapidly during the next few years By 1896 20 mines in the Kryvyi Rih Basin were producing over 1 000 000 tonnes of ore Industrial expansion continued in the region up to 1917 Production dropped during the First World War 1 Foundation and growth in Soviet Union edit nbsp Construction work on a new giant blast furnace iron melting unit at Lenin Metallurgical Works Soviet name in Kryvyi Rih After the formation of the Soviet Union and expulsion of Austro Hungarian forces and then anti communist forces occupying the region under Anton Denikin relative normalcy resumed 1 Planning of the plant began in 1929 with the intent to construct an integrated steel plant comprising iron ore and carbon mining to finished steel products 3 In 1931 the chairman of the Supreme Economic Council of the USSR Grigori Sergo Ordzhonikidze signed a decree ordering the construction of the facility that same year the foundation stone of the metallurgical plant was laid In August 1934 the first metal was produced at Kryvorizhstal later known as Kryvyi Rih Metallurgical Plant 4 Before the onset of the Second World War the plant operated with three blast furnaces of 3 160 m3 and two open hearth furnaces along with a heat and power plant In 1941 a blooming mill with a yearly capacity of 1 7 million tonnes a fourth blast furnace and a third open hearth furnace came online shortly before the Nazi occupation 5 Before German troops arrived equipment and employees were evacuated to Nizhny Tagil east of the Ural Mountains 5 During the German occupation from 14 August 1941 to 22 February 1944 1 what remained of the plant was left in ruins 6 After recapturing of the area the plant was rebuilt and continued its growth Blast Furnace 7 was built in 1962 and Blast Furnace 8 was completed in 1970 making the plant the largest in Europe In 1974 Blast Furnace 9 opened 1 the biggest in the world with a volume of 5 000 m3 7 Ukrainian independence edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2009 In 1996 restructuring took place combining the mining and ore concentrating unit Novokrivorozhsky HZK Novokrivorizkij GZK NK GZK NK HZK with the Kryvyi Rih State Mining and Metallurgical Combine Kryvorizhstal Krivorizkogo derzhavnogo girnicho metalurgijnogo kombinatu Krivorizhstal Kryvyi Rih coking plant 8 Krivorizkij koksohimichnij zavod KKHZ was included in the group in 1997 7 forming Novokrivorozhsky mining and processing combine and Kryvyi Rih coking plant Novokrivorizkij girnicho zbagachuvalnij kombinat i Krivorizkij koksohimichnij zavod Krivorizhstal or Kryvoriszhstal This was all on paper given that the three units had been always been designed to work jointly and that the facilities were on the same site First privatization 2004 edit Kryvorizhstal became internationally known when it was privatized in June 2004 for a sum of US 800 million 9 10 4 26 billion 11 against a government set reserve price of 714 million 12 to a consortium called Investment Metallurgical Union 7 This consortium included Rinat Akhmetov s SCM and Interpipe Group 11 controlled by then President Kuchma s son in law Viktor Pinchuk 10 Higher offers from foreign investors including a joint bid from Severstal Arcelor and a bid from Tata Steel were rejected on bidding technicalities 13 The deal was widely criticized by the opposition and from abroad as an example of corruption and state property mismanagement 10 On the initiative of newly elected President Viktor Yushchenko the privatization deal was dismissed by a court in June 2005 and the company sold again in a fair auction 10 2005 Second privatisation and ArcelorMittal company edit At the time of the second privatisation the company had annual sales of 1897 million with a net profit of 378 million and cash reserves of 413 million The plant had a production capacity of 10 million tonnes of raw steel and a rolling capacity of under 7 million tonnes and was able to source most of its requirements for iron ore and coke locally 14 The bidding process was broadcast live on Ukrainian television 10 with Arcelor Mittal Steel and Vadim Novinsky s Smart Holdings bidding Mittal Steel was the highest bidder and acquired a 93 02 percent stake in Kryvorizhstal on 24 October 2005 for 24 2 billion or US 4 81 billion 10 Mittal Steel was expected to finance the acquisition from its own cash reserves and from a 3 billion loan arranged with UK based Citigroup The price exceeded analyst predictions of 3 billion 14 making it the largest privatization deal in the former Soviet Union citation needed In 2006 the company was renamed Mittal Steel Kryvyi Rih 15 Ukrainian VAT Mittal Stil Krivij Rig and later in 2007 after the takeover of Arcelor by Mittal steel to form ArcelorMittal the company was renamed ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih 16 During the late 2000s financial crisis steel production dropped from 8 1 million tonnes in 2007 17 to 6 2 million in 2008 18 and 5 million in 2009 19 with decreases in other production metrics and revenues with the company registering a net loss of 120 million in 2009 down from a profit of 4 7 billion the year before 20 Production levels recovered to 2008 values in 2010 21 22 Investments 2006 2022 edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Between 2006 and 2022 in Ukraine the company s total investments amounted to 10 billion including 4 8 billion take over amount during the privatization 5 2 billion investment in production development Major investment projects from 2006 to 2022 included Reconstruction of Coke Oven Batteries 3 and 4 199 million Category 1 reconstruction of Blast Furnace No 8 127 million Reconstruction of Oxygen Block 2 45 million Construction of ladle furnace and Continuous Caster Machine 1 112 million Construction of the new packing line at Light Section Mill 2 16 million Category 1 reconstruction of Blast Furnace 6 117 million Pulverized coal injection built at Blast Furnace 9 60 million Reconstruction of Coke Oven Batteries 5 and 6 along with the implementation of environmental measures and an automated environmental monitoring system 157 million Modernization of Sinter Shop 2 over 180 million Construction of two new continuous Casting Machines 2 and 3 over 160 million Reconstruction of Light Section Mill 250 4 over 60 million Construction of new gas cleaning plants for Basic Oxygen Furnaces 4 5 and 6 with SO combustion and implementation of automated environmental monitoring system 65 million From 2008 to 2015 approximately 500 million were invested to replenish old crushers build new sections at the beneficiation plants total of three sections purchase new ball mills modernize the haulage fleet and in pit equipment open a new horizon at the Artem underground mine 1 135 m and reconstruct the tailing ponds In February 2022 the Russian large scale invasion of Ukraine caused ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih to put it temporarily on hold several major investment projects including a pellet plant construction initially slated to open in 2023 The company makes an exception only for those projects without which the production might stop completely Such an example is the construction of a new tailing dump Tretya Karta which is vital for the continuation of ore mining and safe storage of production waste The commissioning of the new tailing dump will make it possible to abandon two old similar facilities and reduce the anthropogenic load on the nearby territories ArcelorMittal company is investing over 150 million in this project Mauro Longobardo was appointed Chief Executive Officer of ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih effective 18 February 2020 citation needed Production editIn 2005 the plant produced over 6 MT of crude steel 5 MT of rolled products and 5 5 MT of hot metal 23 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Located entirely in Kryvyi Rih this steel company was built as an integrated mining and steel plant comprising an iron ore mine ore processing factories and two open pits a coke processing plant three sinter shops steel workshops of different types two blast furnace shops blooming facilities and three metal rolling workshops Production volumes in 2021 were as follows Ore mining 24 5 million tons Concentrate 11 million tons Hot metal 5 3 million tons Steel 4 9 million tons Rolled products 4 6 million tonsSee also editList of steel producersReferences edit a b c d e f g Historical chronicle of events Kryvyi Rih City 1734 1900 kryvyirih dp ua archived from the original on 13 July 2007 Vlasniki ta benecificiari kompaniyi ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih opendatabot ua in Ukrainian 2023 09 30 Retrieved 2022 12 17 Paradoksalnye vospominaniya o budushem KRIVOROZhSTALI Bittersweet memories of the future KRYVORIZHSTAL h ua Istoriya stvorennya zaliznogo sercya Ukrayini Krivorizhstali kryvyi rih one 25 June 2022 a b N A Gurov July 1979 Phases of large growth The 45th anniversary of the Krivorozhstal plant Metallurgist 23 7 Springer New York 439 443 doi 10 1007 BF00736640 ISSN 0026 0894 S2CID 137266340 Krivorozhstal Plant Translated from Metallurg No 7 pp 6 8 July 1979 Krivoj Rog gorod shahterov i metallurgov Archived 2010 02 26 at the Wayback Machine Kryvyi Rih city of miners and metallurgists www krivbassham org a b c ArselorMittal Krivoj Rog Krivorozhstal ArcelorMittal steel Kryvorizhstal file liga net KRIVOROZhSKIJ KOKSOHIMIChESKIJ ZAVOD Kryvyi Rih Coke plant chem2 expoweb ru Marat Terterov ed 2006 1 Editor s Introduction Roses Oranges and Foreign Investors Ukraine Since the Orange Revolution A Business And Investment Review GMB Publishing Ltd p 8 ISBN 184673004X a b c d e f John Marone 19 March 2010 Monopolies thrive as toothless state bows to moguls www kyivpost com Kyiv Post a b Chistaya pribyl Krivorozhstali sostavila 2012 610 mln griven ukrrudprom com in Russian 15 June 2005 Alex Nicholson 14 May 2004 Severstal Warns Kiev Over Major Sell Off www themoscowtimes com The Moscow Times Ukraine has set a minimum bid of 714 million for 93 1 percent of Kryvorizhstal one of Ukraine s few profitable metals companies It reported pre tax profits of 302 million last year and has a capacity of 6 million tons of rolled steel 7 million tons of steel and 7 8 million tons of pig iron Kak zakalyalas Krivorozhstal rosinvest com in Russian 16 August 2005 a b Mittal buys Ukraine s Kryvorizhstal for 4 81 bln usd UPDATE www forbes com AFX News Limited via Forbes 24 October 2005 dead link Krivorozhstal renamed as Mittal Steel Kryvyi Rih Archived 2011 07 16 at the Wayback Machine 14 January 2006 via steelguru com Mittal Steel Kryvyi Rih renamed for ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih 22 06 2007 www kmu gov ua ArcelorMittal Fact Book 2007 PDF www arcelormittal com ArcelorMittal p 129 June 2007 permanent dead link ArcelorMittal Fact Book 2008 PDF www arcelormittal com ArcelorMittal p 97 June 2008 permanent dead link ArcelorMittal Fact Book 2009 PDF www arcelormittal com ArcelorMittal p 97 June 2009 permanent dead link ArcelorMittal Kryviy Rih overview of 2009 www arcelormittal com ArcelorMittal 16 March 2009 ArcelorMittal Fact Book 2010 PDF www arcelormittal com ArcelorMittal p 30 77 July 2011 permanent dead link OJSC ArcelorMittal Kryviy Rih announces its November production results www arcelormittal com ArcelorMittal 17 December 2010 Mittal Steel Company Acquires a 93 Stake in Kryvorizhstal in Ukraine www prnewswire com Mittal Steel Company NV 24 Oct 2005 Sources edit Dan Stern 2011 04 06 Testing the mettle of Ukraine s steel city news bbc co uk BBC World News Reuters Major Ukraine steel plant ramps back up but Russian troops are close Archived 18 May 2022 at the Wayback Machine April 27 2022 The CEO of ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih spoke about the Company s operation under quarantine Archived 23 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine 31 March 2020 WPROST Gigantyczna fabryka wznowi produkcje w miescie Zelenskiego To jest symbol Ukraina zyje Archived April 27 2022 at the Wayback Machine 02 04 2022 Il Sole24 Ore Chi e l italiano che sta dietro all acciaio ucraino May 31 2022 Financial Times Ukraine the 10bn steel plant at the heart of Russia s economic warfare The Wall Street Journal Ukraine s Economy Stabilizes a Boost Alongside Rapid Military Gains Archived September 26 2022 at the Wayback Machine September 13 2022 External links editOfficial site http ukraine arcelormittal com Photos of Coking Plant Blast Furnace No 9 Iron Ore Strip Mine and Blooming Mill 47 52 26 N 33 23 50 E 47 8739 N 33 3972 E 47 8739 33 3972 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih amp oldid 1215690067, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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