Ceramicas Carabobo ready to ship refractory material to Sidor
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Osbert [2011-05-20]
Feb. 10, 2011 - Venezuela's Cer micas Carabobo, which supplies refractory material for furnaces at state steelmaker Sidor, now has its own furnaces operating to begin shipping the input to the steelmaker.
A Cer micas Carabobo union leader said that "The inputs, parts and raw materials necessary to operate and meet Sidor's needs were already purchased."
Cer micas Carabobo halted its operations about 18 months ago after it was nationalized. As a result, 70% of the melting and ladle furnaces at Sidor were shut down due to the lack of replacement refractory bricks. Sidor had to use refractory bricks imported from Brazil to operate the furnaces.
In September 2010, the Venezuelan government announced that it would reactivate Cer micas Carabobo's operations through a technology transfer agreement with Cuba's Refractarios Habana.
The company, now to be called Refractarios Socialistas de Venezuela, was transferred to state heavy industry holding CVG, which took on its reactivation.
Sidor, Venezuela's biggest steelmaker, has liquid steel capacity of 4.2 million tonnes per annum but has been operating at well below capacity since the state took it over from the Luxembourg based Ternium group in 2008. The plant is located in Bol var state's Ciudad Guayana.