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Market Research Report

Steel and Rolled Steel in Russia - 2007

Published by INFOMINE Research Group Contact us : +1-860-674-8796
Published 2007/12 Content info 454 pages, 122 tables, 34 figures
Product code INFO66821
Price From  US $ 6500 Order/Price list
US $ 6500 MS Word File By E-mail (Single User License)

Notice: The original report is written in Russian. Please ask us for more information regarding delivery time.

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Description TOC

Abstract

Introduction

Russia is the 4th greatest producer of steel in the world. Around 10% of industrial production volume and 7% of proceeds from export sales of Russia belonged to Russian ferrous metallurgy sector in 2005. Share of state in pattern of ownership in the sector is below 2%.

Until recently, the features of standing of Russian ferrous metallurgy as a whole were as follows:

  • Improper grade and competitiveness of production owing to availability of outdated and worn productive facilities;
  • Too high material and power consumption of the production;
  • Misbalance between distinct branches of ferrous metallurgy sector, aggravated by breaking economic ties between enterprises of the ex-USSR countries;
  • Extremely unfavorable environmental situation around metallurgical enterprises.

The main negative tendencies, making themselves evident in Russian ferrous metallurgy in early 90s, to a large extent arose from features of Soviet economy, in which political reasons dominated over economic ones. For instance, the task was become the greatest producer of iron and steel in the world, to construct the largest in capacity steel-making facilities, etc. As the result, great steel-making facilities proved located irregularly; in addition, they, as rule, were closely specialized in distinct products.

Resulted disproportion in production and consumption of steel by territories caused too high transport costs, too complicated power and transport lines, surplus expanding auxiliary productions.

Soviet policy tending to only extensive production growth resulted in the fact that, by mid-90s, productive capacities in Russian ferrous metallurgy proved extremely obsolete and worn owing to delay in production reconstruction and modernisation (degree of depreciation reached 60-70%).

That is why current Russian ferrous metallurgy is characterised by availability of obsolete and worn facilities, consuming too much power, fuel and raw materials - by 20-30% (in specific consumption) more than in developed countries.

According to German consulting company UBT/Wolfgang Ruoff&Partner, which analyzed standing of Russian ferrous metallurgy, the main problems of this sector are inefficient utilisation of productive capacities, obsolescence of facilities and high environmental damage from the operating facilities.

When changing to market economy, Russian ferrous metallurgy, being too large-scale, inertial, non-flexible, showed its inadequacy: instead of reducing production costs, the sector demonstrated increasing price on products, growing nonpayments and cutting production volume.

Low competitiveness of production of Russian steel-making sector is owed, first of all, by obsolescence of productive capacities and weak management.

According to EU experts, advantages of Russian ferrous metallurgy are great resources base, availability of modern know-how in metallurgy (high level of scientific-research works), rather qualified and cheap working force, relatively low production costs. On the other hand, among its disadvantages are obsolescence and wearing of productive capacities, high specific consumption of power and resources and unfavourable location of steelmakers (too far from consumers).

In latest years, standing of Russian ferrous metallurgy began to change with changing ownership pattern: new owners increased investments in production development, modernising production facilities and improving grade and competitiveness of products (this is true, first of all, for great steelmaking companies). For instance, by 2007, the Russian steelmaking facilities depreciation (as a whole) decreased to around 48% owing realizing large-scale modernization projects.

At the same time, obsolescence and degree of wearing productive facilities at steel-working enterprises is even higher than at steelmaking enterprises (65%), that hinders increasing output of finished products with high added value. In this connection, share of semis in Russian steel exports remains too large.

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