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Tata
Corus gets £65-million steel order from Royal
Navy
Domain-b.com March 5, 2008
The Royal Navy has placed a contract for 80,000 tonnes
of steel on Tata Steel-acquired Anglo-Dutch steel maker
Corus. The steel will be used for the construction of
two new aircraft carriers that will be inducted in 2014
and 2016.
Corus Construction & Industrial beat-off rival
steel makers to win this contract. The UK-based Corus
will produce the steel at three plants in the UK, of
which one is located in Scotland.
Corus, Europe's second largest steel producer with
annual revenues of over £11 billion and a crude
steel production of about 20 million tonnes, will supply
more than 80,000 tonnes of structural steel for the
two carriers, which will be the biggest and most powerful
surface warships ever constructed for the Royal Navy.
The £3.8bn state-of-the-art carriers, HMS Queen
Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales are due to enter service
in 2014 and 2016, respectively. Corus will start rolling
steel for the aircraft carriers later this year. Corus'
Scunthorpe and Dalzell steelworks will produce plate
steel for the ships' hulls, while the manufacture of
bulb flats - steel used to stiffen the construction
will be made in Skinningrove.
The two new carriers, which will replace three smaller
carriers, will be built in sections and re assembled
at a naval dockyard in Scotland.
Corus has been supplying high quality steel to the
shipbuilding industry and has produced steel for the
manufacture of the world's largest cargo ships. Corus
was formed on 6th October 1999 through the merger of
British Steel and Koninklijke Hoogovens.
On April 2 2007, Corus became a subsidiary of Tata
Steel, after the premier Indian steel company beat Brazilian
steel maker CSN, with an offer of 608 pence per ordinary
share in cash, amounting to a purchase price of $12
billion.
The UK-based steel maker's shares stopped trading from
29 March 2007 and the company's financials have been
consolidated with those of Tata Steel. The combined
enterprise has an aggregate crude steel production capacity
of around 28.1 million tonnes with approximately 82,700
employees across four continents.
Last month Corus announced an investment of £60
million - its largest investment since the acquisition
by Tata - to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions at
its Port Talbot plant by reusing gas generated inside
its basic oxygen steel furnace that produces around
half the energy needed to run the steelworks.
Corus produces carbon steel by the basic oxygen steel
making method at four integrated steelworks.

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