Japan’s second largest steelmaker, JFE Steel, is looking at building a new electric arc furnace at its Kurashiki plant in western Japan to slash its carbon dioxide emissions, the company said on Monday.
The move comes as steelmakers around the world are under pressure to cut CO2 emissions to tackle climate change. Steelmaking generates up to 11% of global carbon emissions, and between 7-9% of all greenhouse gas emissions.
Electric arc furnaces (EAFs) can cut CO2 emissions to a quarter of those that use coal.
Blast furnaces go through a refurbishment every 20 to 25 years and JFE Steel is studying the possibility of constructing an electric arc furnace sometime between 2027 and 2030 when the No-2 unit at Kurashiki is due for refurbishment, a company spokesperson said.
JFE Steel, a unit of JFE Holdings, has eight blast furnaces in Japan, including three at Kurashiki, but it is scheduled to shut one in eastern Japan by March 2024.
“We plan to maintain our annual crude steel output capacity of 26 million tonnes even if we switch one of the blast furnaces with an EAF,” the spokesperson said.
ALSO SEE: Japan’s Kishida Pledges $30bn in Aid at Africa Summit in Tunisia
Trimming Capacity
Japanese steelmakers, including Nippon Steel Corp, have been trimming capacity as they confront a period of waning demand as Japan’s population declines and because of growing competition from the world’s largest producer, China.
The Nihon Keizai Shimbun business daily said on Saturday JFE may spend at least several tens of billions of yen for the new furnace, but the spokesperson said no investment plan has been set as the company has just decided last week to start considering an EAF at Kurashiki.
CO2 emissions from the world’s steel sector will fall 30% by 2050 compared with 2021 as more mills turns to less-polluting electric furnaces, consultancy Wood Mackenzie said in May.
They predict around 48% of global crude steel will be made by electric arc furnaces by 2050, up from 30% in 2021 and almost on a par with blast furnace steelmaking.
- Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard
ALSO SEE:
Nippon Steel to Launch Carbon-Neutral Production in 2024
China’s Real Estate Debt Crisis Spills Over Into Steel Sector
China Delays Peak Steel Emissions Point – Caixin