Global pig iron output down 3.15 percent in Jan

Friday, 21 February 2014 16:17:30 (GMT+3)   |   Istanbul
       

In January this year, global pig iron production amounted to 94.03 million metric tons, increasing by 0.08 percent compared to December and down 3.15 percent on year-on-year basis, according to the preliminary data covering 38 countries accounting for approximately 99 percent of total world blast furnace pig iron production, released by the World Steel Association (worldsteel).
 
In January, pig iron output in Asia amounted to 70.97 million mt, down 4.72 percent, with 54.29 million mt produced by China, down 7.57 percent, 7.22 million mt produced by Japan, up 2.86 percent, and 4.47 million mt produced by India, up 5.36 percent - with all comparisons on year-on-year basis.

Meanwhile, in the same month EU countries produced 8.34 million mt of pig iron, while the CIS produced 7.02 million mt, with an increase of 10.41 percent and a decrease of 0.05 percent respectively, year on year.


Similar articles

Ex-Russia BPI corrects up in line with general market mood, buyers still resist

03 May | Scrap & Raw Materials

Turkey’s Kardemir posts higher net profit for 2023, sales revenues drop

03 May | Steel News

Ex-Brazil BPI prices post expected slight increase in new deals to US

02 May | Scrap & Raw Materials

Roman Perepelytsia at IREPAS: Steel consumption in Ukraine approaches pre-war levels

29 Apr | Steel News

Global BPI market silent as sellers insist on previous higher offers, buyers retreat

26 Apr | Scrap & Raw Materials

German crude steel output increases by 6.0 percent in January-March

25 Apr | Steel News

Japanese crude steel output up 2.9 percent in March from February

23 Apr | Steel News

Ex-Russia BPI sellers fail to achieve higher prices, hike attempts continue

19 Apr | Scrap & Raw Materials

MMK’s crude steel output down 2.9 percent in Q1

19 Apr | Steel News

Brazilian BPI mills target higher export prices, impact of scrap eases as discussed at IIMA meeting

18 Apr | Scrap & Raw Materials