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Domestic
Steel Industry Reaches New Milestone in Energy Efficiency
AISI reports
that the United States' steel industry has achieved a new
milestone in energy efficiency by reducing its energy intensity
per ton of steel shipped by approximately 33 percent since
1990. This represents a further improvement since AISI announced
a 29 percent reduction in 2006. Because of the close relationship
between energy use and greenhouse gas emissions, the industry's
aggregate carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions per ton of steel
shipped have also been substantially reduced.
Compared
to the Kyoto Protocol's call for an average U.S. reduction
of 7 percent in greenhouse gas emissions between 1990 and
2012, this means the American steel industry has already surpassed
the Kyoto target.
"This
improvement in energy efficiency is evidence of the steel
industry's longstanding commitment to sustainability,"
Thomas J. Gibson, AISI president and CEO, said. "This
commitment has brought our processes almost to the limit of
energy-efficiency. Our future plans are built round sectoral
programs, such as the Asia Pacific Partnershipwhere
steelmakers and their governments in China, India, Australia,
Canada, Japan, and Korea, with us, are discussing energy intensity
reduction targets until 2020. In the long-term, we are working
on developing breakthrough steelmaking processes that emit
little or no CO2."
On average,
1.14 tons of carbon dioxide was emitted in 2007 for every
ton of steel produced in the United States. The low CO2 intensity
of American-manufactured steel coupled with its infinite recyclability
is why products made of steel have such low environmental
impacts during their life cycle. For more information, contact
Larry
Kavanagh.
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