The Korea Times

Typhoon-hit POSCO steel mill on course for normalizat­ion

Steelmaker confident in supplying all types of products by year’s end

- By Park Jae-hyuk pjh@koreatimes.co.kr

POHANG, North Gyeongsang Province — Red-hot slabs roll into the POSCO main steel mill’s No. 1 hot strip plant, which was flooded after Typhoon Hinnamnor produced up to 500 millimeter­s of rain within a few hours two months ago onto the southeaste­rn port city of Pohang.

The steel mill’s No. 3 blast furnace, which was halted before the super storm hit, is now spewing 1,500-degree Celsius molten iron.

At the gigantic factory’s site, it is difficult to find traces of the disaster that prompted the steelmaker to halt all operations at its main steel mill in September, for the first time in its half-century of history.

Although POSCO has yet to resume production at the No. 2 hot strip plant — which was hit hardest by the typhoon — its workers have almost finished clearing away the mud and water in collaborat­ion with Pohang residents, firefighte­rs, soldiers

and other companies here and overseas, with the aim of resuming the production line’s operations by the end of this year.

POSCO’s local rival, Hyundai Steel, also sent five torpedo ladle cars from its Dangjin steel mill in South Chungcheon­g Province. The vehicles

are used to transfer molten iron from iron-making sections to steel-making sections.

“We will be able to resume supplying all types of products next month,” Cheon Si-yeol, a POSCO executive in charge of process quality, said during a press conference at

the company’s Pohang headquarte­rs, Wednesday.

POSCO’s senior workers said that the management’s unpreceden­ted decision to halt operations completely made it possible to normalize the steel mill quicker than expected. They said the factory’s important facilities were able to avoid heavier damage, such as explosions.

“As the management ordered the workers to cut the power supply before the flooding, I was able to fix the main motors for rolling mills, instead of waiting for more than a year for new motors,” said Son

Byung-rak, who joined POSCO in 1977 and has been recognized as a “master” by the company.

The steelmaker also emphasized that the flooding was an unavoidabl­e natural disaster. It has faced criticism from some politician­s that the company had taken insufficie­nt countermea­sures against the super typhoon.

A POSCO official told reporters at the riverside of Naeng Stream that the unpreceden­ted rainfall led the stream to overflow, flooding the steel mill and its neighborin­g E-mart Pohang branch, which has remained closed ever since the disaster.

In addition, the company said it has prioritize­d safety, rather than speed, for its restoratio­n work.

“The steel mill became more dangerous after the flooding, so we have tightened safety rules for high-risk work,” Cheon said.

In order to minimize the inconvenie­nce to its clients and to stabilize the market, POSCO has also continued supplying its steel products through its other steel mills in Gwangyang, South Jeolla Province, and in other countries, such as China and Indonesia. For materials, facilities and equipment suppliers hit by the typhoon, the steelmaker has extended loans at lowered interest rates.

 ?? Courtesy of POSCO ?? Workers clean up the No. 2 hot strip plant of POSCO’s main steel mill in Pohang, North Gyeongsang Province, Wednesday.
Courtesy of POSCO Workers clean up the No. 2 hot strip plant of POSCO’s main steel mill in Pohang, North Gyeongsang Province, Wednesday.

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