Tata Steel enlists ABB for £1.25bn modernisation initiative

As part of Port Talbot’s transition to sustainable steelmaking, ABB will supply electrical power distribution and electromagnetic stirring for the new electric arc furnace (EAF).

© Image Copyrights Title
Font size:
Print

ABB has won orders to provide electrical power supply management and distribution and electromagnetic stirring at Tata Steel’s Port Talbot Steelworks in the UK.

The two project scopes by ABB will help ensure safe, efficient and optimised operations when a new 320-ton capacity electric arc furnace (EAF) starts up in 2028.

The global steelmaker is investing more than £1.25 billion at the Welsh plant, inclusive of £500 million in UK Government support, with focus on the energy transition and decarbonisation of its operations.

The site will shift to low-emission steel recycling, aiming
to cut CO2 emissions by an estimated 90 percent. Tata Steel UK has the ambition to produce fossil-free steel by 2045 and reduce 30 percent of its CO2 emissions by 2030.

As it begins its work in support of these objectives, ABB will be responsible for the delivery of electrical power distribution equipment, including high and low-voltage switchgear, power transformers and distribution transformers, connected through a power distribution control system across the facility.

This will be central to achieving a fully digitally enabled solution for power management and distribution in line with ABB’s
ambitions to drive real progress through leaner, cleaner operations.

Under the main contract between Tenova, a developer and provider of sustainable solutions for the green transition of the metals industry, and Tata Steel, ABB will deliver its ArcSave electromagnetic stirrer-based metallurgy technology.

This equipment, known as Consteerrer, is jointly developed by ABB and Tenova, under an exclusive global partnership agreement, and explicitly tailored for continuous charging EAFs.

With over 165 references worldwide, it brings about numerous advantages, including a five to seven percent increase in EAF productivity, a three to five percent decrease in
energy consumption, and an additional one percent yield.

It is expected that ABB will commission its technologies by 2027 in time for full operational start-up at Port Talbot.

Construction work for Tata Steel’s EAF project is set to begin this year. It will mark the start of a significant transformation in the steelmaking process at the site.

“We’re looking forward to ABB helping us to positively impact the transformation at Port Talbot Steelworks, a site undergoing critical change for the future of UK steelmaking,” said Rajesh Nair, CEO, Tata Steel UK.

“Their proven
technologies and expertise will support our evolving production processes on site, enabling resource and cost efficiencies for the long term. We’re looking forward to driving this project forward.”

“Our team has an established relationship with Tata Steel and Tenova, and we know that together we can shape operations to benefit how this steel is made, safely and sustainably,” said Frederik Esterhuizen, Global Business Line Manager for Metals, ABB Process Industries.

“Our aim is to work with our customer and the various suppliers involved in the project to ensure the timelines for commissioning are met and that the region can continue its rich heritage in steelmaking into the future.”

Previous Article Airbus, Leonardo and Thales merge to form European space powerhouse
Next Article Manchester engineers turn railways into renewable power sources
Related Posts
© mattImage Copyrights Title

Planet-friendly cups made the eco electric way

fonts/
or