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Mittal Steel: Consolidating US Operations |
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IntroductionMittal had realised that the price of the steel scrap, the raw material for mini-mills, would rise as more mini-mills were constructed. He had therefore invested in a substitute for scrap known as direct-reduced iron (DRI), and was soon producing more of it than any one else. DRI cost about $95 a tonne in 1996, compared with $155 a tonne for the high-quality scrap that mini-mills mostly used, and $125 a tonne for the pig-iron used to make steel in blast furnaces. DRI was not a proprietary technology, but it was complicated and hard to copy.
1] Scott, Morrison. An analyst with Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, an American investment bank, commented 10th January 1998, Vol. 346, Issue 8050, pp.55-56. |
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