Iron Ore and Other? Raw Material Sources for a Primary Iron and Steel Industry in Western Canada

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
T. H. Janes
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
10
File Size:
5915 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1958

Abstract

THE POSSIBILITY of producing pig iron from iron ores of British Columbia for a west coast primary iron and steel industry has been investigated by the provincial government and by commercial interests on sever.al -occasions. The latest study is that currently under way by The Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of Canada, Limited. The Company is studying the possibility of making pig iron from the oxide calcine resulting from the roasting of pyrrhotite. tailings used in making sulphuric acid for fertilizer production at Kimberley. A comprehensive report on the subject .of establishing a primary iron and steel works in the Province, based on local iron ores, was prepared by Arthur G. Mc-Kee and Company of Cleveland, Ohio, in 1942 for the B.C. Minister of Mines and is available to interested parties. A detailed survey on the subject was also pre-pared in 1954 by Dr. G. P. Con-tractor, then .of the British Columbia Research Council. Considerable information is there-fore available on most aspects of an integrated primary iron and steel industry in British Columbia to supply the needs of the western provinces. To date, however, no basic iron industry has been established despite the .occurrence of high-grade iron ore deposits on the offshore islands and the high freight charges on iron and steel products brought into the area from Eastern Canada and overseas producers. The chief deterrent has always been the relatively small and highly diversified market available to a local steel producer. Other major fact-ors have been the lack of sufficient proven reserves of iron ore, and the difficulty of making pig iron, suit-able for steel manufacture, economically on a small scale. Technical and economic conditions have changed considerably since World War II and the establishment of a primary industry based on electric furnace production of pig iron or on one of the direct reduction processes, coupled with electric furnace steel production, may now be economically feasible.
Citation

APA: T. H. Janes  (1958)  Iron Ore and Other? Raw Material Sources for a Primary Iron and Steel Industry in Western Canada

MLA: T. H. Janes Iron Ore and Other? Raw Material Sources for a Primary Iron and Steel Industry in Western Canada. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1958.

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