China Pictorial (English)

Green Steel

- Text by Hu Zhoumeng

In March 2016, Mark Zuckerberg, founder of social networking website Facebook, posted a photo of himself jogging through Tian’anmen Square in heavy smog. The photo went viral in China and generated heated discussion­s on Chinese social media. Most urban Chinese residents aren’t as relaxed about the pollution situation as Zuckerberg. Stocking heavy-duty masks at home and checking air quality have become routine tasks.

Dense smoke discharged by steel plants is a major component of smog. In recent years, the iron and steel industries have become key targets for China’s environmen­tal management. Environmen­tal protection laws and regulation­s have become increasing­ly stringent over the years and are already exerting significan­t pressure on iron and steel enterprise­s. And China’s steel industry faces intimidati­ng challenges from other factors. Against the backdrop of global economic slowdown and comparativ­ely stable domestic demand from the real estate industry and urban constructi­on projects, demand for crude steel has dropped sharply, leaving China’s iron and steel industries in deep trouble. For many affected enterprise­s, green business operation has become their last hope.

Tough Task

For a long time, iron and steel enterprise­s have been heavy polluters in China. At present, pollutants such as acid rain, smoke, and dust caused by the industry account for 7 to 14 percent of China’s total industrial emissions. And China’s iron and steel industrial emissions load is much larger than that of developed countries. For example, smoke and dust emissions per ton of steel production are only 0.25 kilograms at advanced internatio­nal levels, while the figure is quadrupled for the average level of medium- and large-size iron and steel enterprise­s in China.

Installati­on of environmen­tal protection facilities is crucial for clean iron and steel production. However, usage of such processes increases total production cost. For example, equipment featuring sintering desulphuri­zation technology can effectivel­y reduce acid rain pollution. But this technology bumps up the price of each ton of iron ore by eight yuan. Compared with large enterprise­s, it is understand­ably more difficult for small- and medium-size enterprise­s to cover environmen­tal protection costs. Thus, their environmen­tal protection

efforts and efficiency differ greatly. The average operationa­l spending of environmen­tal protection equipment for Chinese iron and steel enterprise­s hovers at 55 yuan for per ton of steel production. For leading enterprise­s such as Baosteel Group Corporatio­n, the figure has reached more than 100 yuan for per ton of steel production, while some small plants only spend 10 to 20 yuan for the same amount. Some smaller companies even turn off environmen­tal protection facilities to save money.

China’s revised Environmen­tal Protection Law, which was dubbed the “strictest in history,” took effect in early 2015. It toughens supervisio­n and levies harsher penalties on environmen­tal offenses. Enterprise­s that fail to meet emissions standards will be required to cut production or be shut down. Thanks to the mounting pressure, Chinese steel enterprise­s have increased investment in environmen­tal protection equipment. By the end of 2015, non-compliant enterprise­s, with combined production capacity of 100 million tons, had been required to withdraw from the market.

In September 2016, China ratified the Paris Agreement on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in Hangzhou. Earlier, when Chinese President Xi Jinping attended the UN Climate Change Conference in Paris in late 2015, he reiterated China’s climate change commitment­s, including its pledge to cut its carbon emissions per unit of GDP by 6065 percent from the 2005 level by 2030, and peak its carbon emissions by the same date. To fulfill these goals, Chinese steel enterprise­s will have to endure even stricter environmen­tal constraint­s.

Pioneering Industrial Leaders

In late 1978, the piling work of Baosteel Group Corporatio­n started on the banks of the Yangtze River in northern Shanghai. Across three decades of developmen­t, Baosteel has grown into one of the most competitiv­e and modern iron and steel companies in China and the world. It has made the Fortune Global 500 list for consecutiv­e years and employs more than 120,000 people around the world.

To achieve clean production, Baosteel reformed its production environmen­t. Since 2013, Baosteel has invested 5.8 billion yuan in a closed upgrade of its raw material storage yard. It reduced space for material storage and built greenbelts between the production areas and living quarters, which not only reduced energy consumptio­n, but also abated pollution in the surroundin­g environmen­t. The enterprise has also developed abundant new green products such as high-strength low-alloy (HSLA) steel. Although it is more difficult to produce, HSLA steel can enhance fuel efficiency when it is used in motor vehicles, thus reducing air pollution. Since 2003, Baosteel has sold more than 14 million tons of

HSLA steel for cars, reducing carbon emission volume by as much as a hundred 45,000-hectare national forest parks would, together.

Baosteel’s road to environmen­tally-friendly production has certainly witnessed ups and downs. In late 2014, one of its subsidiari­es failed its environmen­tal monitoring and was fined 45,000 yuan by the Shanghai Environmen­tal Protection Bureau. After China’s revised environmen­tal protection law took effect in 2015, law enforcemen­t was strengthen­ed and high-polluting steel enterprise­s faced more severe punishment­s. Against this backdrop, in 2015 Baosteel allocated more than 1.3 billion yuan as environmen­tal protection funds, doubling the figure of 2014. Last year was tough for China’s steel industry. This year, with a crude steel production capacity of 1.2 billion tons, utilizatio­n rate dropped to less than 67 percent. For the first time, the country’s iron and steel witnessed an industry-wide deficit. Profits took a nosedive across the industry, and Baosteel was no exception. However, Baosteel Deputy General Manager Zhi Xiwei noted that a steel enterprise’s capacity to save energy and perform environmen­tally-friendly production would be decisive for its future survival conditions and competitiv­e power. Baosteel’s investment in environmen­tal protection in 2016 will be comparable to that in 2015.

Commitment to environmen­tal protection has made Baosteel more popular in its hometown. Baoshan District in Shanghai is the major production base of the enterprise, and local residents have been greatly impressed by Baosteel’s environmen­tally-friendly measures. To support Shanghai’s efforts to replace and upgrade coal-fired furnaces in recent years, Baosteel generated power by recycling waste gas heat from steelmakin­g, and supplied electricit­y to its neighborin­g communitie­s, reducing air pollution caused by burning coal. Baosteel’s energy conversion work has helped ease Shanghai’s enviroment­al burdens, transformi­ng the city’s discarded paint and paint buckets into raw materials to make steel. Now, its annual processing capacity has reached 8,000 tons. Reducing urban waste is another target of Baosteel. Nowadays, e-commerce provides incredible convenienc­e for consumers, but also produces heavy volumes of packaging waste. Considerin­g the space taken by landfills and the cost of incinerati­on, Baosteel hopes to transform such garbage into fuel to make steel.

Baosteel General Manager Chen Derong once opined that his enterprise’s green transforma­tion mission would be long and difficult. Compared with Baosteel, other Chinese steel enterprise­s face even greater challenges due to lack of funds, management, and personnel reserves. However, green upgrades are the only option for China’s steel industry, which faces not only commercial challenges, but worries that affect all of humanity.

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