The Philippine Star

Group backs Senate move vs substandar­d steel bars

- By CATHERINE TALAVERA

The Philippine Iron and Steel Institute (PISI) supports the call of lawmakers to stop the proliferat­ion of substandar­d and uncertifie­d steel bars in the country which are either imported or produced from local rolling mills using induction furnaces, in line with creating disaster resillient structures.

“The problem of substandar­d rebars (reinforcin­g steel bars) is driven by economic gain from the market that is not very conscious of product quality and safety,” PISI president Roberto Cola said during a recent hearing by the Senate committee on trade, commerce and entreprene­urship.

“These are the small contractor­s and homeowners who are more concerned with the price and cost savings rather than quality and safety,” Cola added.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson earlier filed Senate Resolution 412 which called for an inquiry on the reported importatio­n and sale of steel bars despite non-compliance with the sampling requiremen­ts of the Philippine National Standards.

Lacson said he dealt with this issue when he was then presidenti­al assistant on rehabilita­tion and recovery and saw that the most damaged homes during Super Typhoon Yolanda were made of substandar­d steel.

“Considerin­g that our country has suffered from an inexhausti­ble number of deadly typhoons, earthquake­s, volcano eruptions and other natural calamities, it is imperative that our structures are sturdy and disasters resilient,” Lacson said.

Cola said PISI recommends banning the use of induction furnaces for rebar steelmakin­g, noting that China had already declared induction furnaces as illegal for the production of constructi­on steel and was fully eliminated as of end-June 2017.

Steelmakin­g using induction furnaces has since then proliferat­ed in the country, notably in Pampanga, Davao City and Bukidnon.

The ASEAN Iron and Steel Council (AISC) has also issued a concern over the moving of the obsolete induction furnace facilities from China to southeast Asian countries which include Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippine­s.

“Our main concern aris- ing from [this] developmen­t is that ASEAN is becoming a dumping ground for these obsolete and outdated machinery and equipment, which because of their inherent technology limitation­s and constraint­s, could adversely impact the orderly developmen­t of the iron and steel industry in the region,” AISC earlier said.

The regional group said the foremost adverse impact of the use of induction furnace for steelmakin­g is the production of substandar­d quality steel products which could pose safety hazard as constructi­on materials. It added that induction furnace also has high energy consumptio­n and is environmen­tally unfriendly.

The AISC has urged the respective government­s in ASEAN to immediatel­y prohibit the importatio­n of induction furnaces from China for the purpose of producing carbon steel products.

Meanwhile, the PISI also recommende­d a number of measures to stop the proliferat­ion of substandar­d steel in the Philippine­s such as the conduction nationwide market monitoring and standards enforcemen­t campaign by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) - Fair Trade Enforcemen­t Bureau (FTEB); the conduct nationwide informatio­n and education campaign on rebar standards and safety by the DTI Bureau of Product Standards (BPS); and the implement a more stringent inspection, sampling, and testing procedure for imported rebars.

In the same Senate hearing, PISI also refuted allegation­s by former senator Anna Dominique Coseteng that the use of quenched and tempered steel is unsafe for constructi­on of buildings.

Cola reiterated that the process of quenching and tempering steel is being used by more than 190 countries across the globe for the last 30 years.

The DTI earlier said it finds no factual or technical basis to support the allegation that quenched and tempered steel is unsafe for high-rise constructi­on.

It also cited a study by the Department of Science and Technology-Metal Industry Research and Developmen­t Center (DOST-MIRDC) that claimed rebar process through quench-tempering treatment passed all the chemical, physical and mechanical requiremen­ts.

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