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Mapping the annual flow of steel in the United States Yongxian Zhu, Kyle Syndergaard, and Daniel R Cooper Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.9b01016 • Publication Date (Web): 30 Aug 2019 Downloaded from pubs.acs.org on August 30, 2019
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Mapping the annual flow of steel in the
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United States
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Yongxian Zhu1, Kyle Syndergaard1, Daniel R Cooper1* 1. Mechanical Engineering Department, University of Michigan,
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George G. Brown Laboratory,
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2350 Hayward Street, Ann Arbor, MI, USA, 48109-2125
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*Corresponding
author phone: (734) 764-1357, email address:
[email protected] 9 10
Abstract art
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Abstract
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A detailed understanding of material flows is needed to target increased
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material efficiency and the circular economy. In this article, the U.S. steel
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flow is modeled as a series of nodes representing processes and products.
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An easily updatable nonlinear least squares optimization is used to
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reconcile the inconsistencies across 293 collated data records on flows
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through and between the nodes. The data come from an integrated
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analysis that includes top-down estimates of steel flow from trade bodies
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and government statistical agencies, bottom-up estimates of the steel
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embedded in products based on production statistics and bills of materials,
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and the mass of imports and exports based on international money flows.
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A weighting methodology is used to consistently assign confidence scores
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to the data and the optimization is used to achieve mass balance and
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minimize the sum of the squares of the weighted residuals. The results
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indicate that yield improvement efforts should focus on sheet metal
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forming in the car industry, which accounts for nearly half of all generated
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fabrication scrap. The quantity of end-of-life scrap exported and landfilled
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is greater than the quantity of steel products imported. Increased
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domestic recycling of end-of-life scrap might displace around a third of
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these imports.
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Keywords: circular economy, material efficiency, material flow analysis,
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data reconciliation, nonlinear optimization
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Introduction
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The steel industry accounts for 30% of global industrial greenhouse gas
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emissions (GHG) 1. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
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(IPCC) recommends an overall 40% to 70% reduction in GHG emissions
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from 2010 levels by 2050 2. However, with current best steelmaking
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practices already approaching thermodynamic limits, even deployment of
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cutting-edge production technologies will not be enough for the steel
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industry to meet the IPCC’s emissions targets 3,4.
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The realization that steel production must decrease if emissions targets
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are to be achieved has helped lead to new research areas under the
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banners of ‘material efficiency’ 5 and the ‘circular economy’ 6, both aimed
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at reducing emissions-intensive material production. Researchers in these
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new areas require a detailed material map in order to identify
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opportunities.
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Unlike in the developing world, U.S. per capita steel stocks plateaued
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around 1980. The stock saturation level has been estimated at 9.1-14.3
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t/capita 7–9. Per capita stocks are expected to saturate in much of the
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developing world to a level similar to those in the U.S. by the late 21st
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century 10,11. Therefore, the derived U.S. consumption pattern may
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represent a population-scaled surrogate model of the future global state.
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Previous steel maps and production statistics
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A detailed snapshot of global production and consumption in 2008 is
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provided by Cullen et al. 12, and Pauliuk et al. 9 estimate the in-use iron
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stocks for 200 countries for the same year. Wang et al. construct global
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and country level iron cycles for the year 2000 13. Other global flows focus
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on the production of crude steel without analyzing the flow of intermediate
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products7,14,15.
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There have been numerous studies on steel use in regions and states,
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including for the U.K. 16,17, Japan and Asia 18,19, the U.S.7–9,20, and North
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America 10. However, these studies either present steel flow data at such a
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low resolution as to make it difficult to glean detailed recommendations or
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are mainly concerned with steel stock levels and scrap discards, which are
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only a portion of the overall steel flow.
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U.S. focused studies that provide a one year snapshot of the steel flow
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include Andersen and Hyman, who create calibrated energy and material
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flow models for the steel industry in 1994 based on publicly available data
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and starting with raw materials and proceeding through to semi-finished
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products 21. Müller et al. constructed a flow diagram for steel in 2000
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including imports and exports, but only showing aggregated flows of
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products (e.g., “construction”) 8.
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The World Steel Association (WSA) releases a yearly dataset showing
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production, consumption, and trade data for over 80 countries 22. High
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resolution domestic production data are presented for intermediate
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products such as hot rolled coil or construction reinforcement bar (rebar).
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The WSA also publishes international trade data as mass flows but
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aggregates direct trade (imports and exports of steelmaking raw materials
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such as iron ore and steel mill products such as cold rolled coil) into broad
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categories such as “flat products,” and only provide an overall indirect
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trade mass flow. Indirect trade is of finished products (e.g., automobiles)
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that contain steel. The WSA provides no information on finished goods
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fabrication or scrap generation and trade.
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The United States Geological Survey (USGS), using data largely derived
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from the trade body American Iron and Steel Institute 23, presents more
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specifics on the U.S. steel industry than the WSA. A yearly “Minerals
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Yearbook” has sections on iron and steel 24, iron and steel scrap 25, and
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iron ore 26. Unlike the WSA, USGS reports granular data on intermediate
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product (direct) imports and exports and scrap consumption. Neither
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USGS nor the WSA publish statistics with standard deviation errors;
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however, errors are clearly present that manifest themselves as
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discrepancies both within and across the data sources. One source of error
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is the process of collecting and aggregating the data through regular
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surveys of steel companies. For example, the Iron and Steel Scrap section
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of the 2015 USGS Minerals Yearbook 25 notes that data are derived from
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voluntary monthly or annual surveys, and that about 68% of known pig
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iron and raw steel producers responded that year, representing only 32%
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of the total scrap consumed that year. USGS reports data for the most
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recent year and several previous years. Numbers for previous years have
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often been revised as the result of continuing industry survey returns.
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There is therefore a tradeoff between the pertinence and the reliability of
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the data when using the comprehensive USGS datasets to help examine
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steel flows.
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Scope of this article
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A detailed U.S. steel material flow analysis (MFA) is needed to determine
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the production (and hence emissions) attributable to U.S. consumption
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and to identify the most effective strategies to reduce steel demand. This
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article focuses on 2014 as the most recent year for which detailed and
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reliable production and intermediate product data are available from
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USGS and the WSA.
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The MFA is tabulated in the Supporting Information (Table S2) and is
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presented in the main article as a Sankey diagram, which is a common
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form of depicting energy and mass flows 27,28. The flow from U.S. mining
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and scrap purchases to final U.S. consumption (flow of steel into use) is
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shown sequentially from the left side of the diagram to the right. The
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width of the lines on the diagram are proportional to the size of the mass
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flows.
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Methodology
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Several methods exist which could generate a U.S. steel map. Economic
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data could be used to assign steel flows to monetary flows based on
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commerce reporting. However, formal input-output tables only provide
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sectoral level resolution (e.g., construction) and the conversion from money
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flows to steel flows varies widely among products. Otherwise, top-down data
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on steel production (e.g., the WSA Statistical Yearbook) can be used to
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estimate low resolution steel flows to the level of intermediate products
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(e.g., wire rod) and in some cases low resolution sectors (e.g., transport). The
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opposite approach of using bottom-up data is based on combining sales data
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for specific classes of products with average bills of materials.
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An integrated analysis is used in this article that leverages the knowledge
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embedded in all the above techniques. Data from trade organizations (e.g.,
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the WSA), governmental scientific agencies (e.g., USGS), and academic
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literature (e.g., Wang et al. 13) is combined with monetary trade statistics
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(e.g., Comtrade data on imports and exports 29), and bottom-up estimates
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derived by the authors (see Data records on U.S. manufacturing…). The
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steel flow is modeled as a series of connected nodes representing major
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steel processing technologies (e.g., the blast furnace) and major products
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used and created by industry (e.g., iron ore or passenger cars). Data
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records from the integrated analysis are catalogued (S3) under the
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corresponding flow coordinate shown in Figure 1. For example, USGS 26
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states that 26.8 Mt of iron (contained within iron ore) enters the blast
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furnace (BF). This datum is catalogued under the coordinate (1,2).
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Multiple, potentially conflicting data records may be catalogued under the
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same coordinate; e.g., data sources report that domestically produced pig
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iron exports in 2014 were equal to 6.77 kt (USGS 24), 7 kt (USGS: (31)),
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and 52 kt (WorldSteel 22). All these records are catalogued under the
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coordinate (2,49). Unconventional data referring to multiple flows are
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catalogued as well. For example, USGS 24 does not record the production
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of continuously cast billets, blooms, and slabs separately (each is a “node”
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in the steel map) but does record the sum of the three. This datum is
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recorded under coordinate (8,55).
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Inconsistencies between the collated and derived data records are
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reconciled using a least squares optimization model (see Data
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reconciliation). The next three sections describe the modeled steel flow and
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the origin of key data records used to generate the steel map. All data
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records used in this analysis can be found in the Supporting Information
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(SI).
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Figure 1: The coordinate system used to define the steel flow and catalogue data records. See S1.2 for complete details of the cataloguing method
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Data records on the U.S. steel industry (Nodes: 1-23)
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Steel “flows” from liquid steel production through casting, intermediate
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product manufacturing, fabrication of end-use goods, use, and finally end-
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of-life (EOL) processing. There are additional flows into and out of these
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categories in the form of imports, metal losses, scrap generation, and
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exports.
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Liquid metal production
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In primary steelmaking, iron ore is first converted to pig iron in a blast
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furnace (BF) and then to steel in a basic oxygen furnace (BOF). Small
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amounts of scrap, DRI, and other iron inputs are consumed alongside iron
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ore in the BF. The quantities of each input are reported by USGS 24. Iron
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ore production, import, and export are reported in the USGS Minerals
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Yearbook in both the Iron and Steel section and the Iron Ore section 24,26.
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Iron ore is also used to produce direct reduced iron (DRI), which is another
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raw material used in steelmaking. The production, import, and export of
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DRI are reported in the WSA Yearbook 22 and by Midrex 31.
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Liquid high-carbon-content pig iron is typically sent straight from the BF
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to the BOF, where it is combined with scrap that helps to cool the melt 15.
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However, the pig iron may instead be cast into ingots that are later used
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for iron castings, scrap contaminant dilution in EAFs, or in BOFs not
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situated near the BF. The WSA reports the production, import, and export
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of pig iron in the U.S. 22.
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In secondary steelmaking, scrap metal is melted in electric arc furnaces
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(EAFs) 24. EOL and manufacturing scrap consumption is reported in the
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USGS Minerals Yearbook in the Iron and Steel Scrap section 25. Some pig
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iron and DRI, up to 50% of the melt 32, is also used in the EAF to control
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the concentration of steel scrap impurities.
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A small percentage (50% of industry 3: