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  2. Fos-sur-Mer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fos-sur-Mer

    The facilities include container handling terminals and a gas (methane) terminal. The waterside location of the industrial zone is attractive to heavy industry including steel. The steel group ArcelorMittal has its Sollac Méditerranée plant here ( merged into ArcelorMittal in 2006). The presence of the steel, chemistry and oil industries ...

  3. ArcelorMittal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ArcelorMittal

    ArcelorMittal S.A. is a Luxembourg-based multinational steel manufacturing corporation headquartered in Luxembourg City. It is ranked second on the list of steel producers behind Baowu , and had an annual crude steel production of 78 million metric tonnes in 2023. [ 1 ]

  4. Saint-Chély-d'Apcher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint-Chély-d'Apcher

    The town has a long-standing iron foundry, owned by the ArcelorMittal group. It comprises production lines for rolling, annealing and scouring, and it also manufactures steel. The Arcelor Mittal factory of Saint chely was created in 1916. It produces 100,000 tonnes of steel per year and it is the European leader in top of the range products.

  5. Sollac - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sollac

    Production of crude steel at Serémange reached 1,411,000 tons by 1959. Serémange had its own oxygen factory, which was expanded in 1959. This was the location where the pure oxygen Kaldo process was to be installed, with a planned capacity of 500,000 tons. [10] A 160t Kaldo furnace was installed in 1960 at Sollac's Florange steelworks. [13]

  6. Arcelor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arcelor

    The company was created in 2002 by a merger of the former companies Aceralia (Spain), Usinor (France) and Arbed (Luxembourg). Arcelor is now part of ArcelorMittal after a takeover by Mittal Steel in 2006.

  7. ARBED building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARBED_building

    The ARBED building in 2011. The ARBED building is the generally used name for the former headquarters of ArcelorMittal and one of its predecessors, the ARBED steel manufacturing company, which was completed in 1922 on the Avenue de la Liberté, opposite the Rose Garden in Luxembourg City.

  8. Creusot-Loire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creusot-Loire

    By February 2018, the organization had been rebaptized Industeel France and was then owned by ArcelorMittal. [12] The French arm had been augmented by Industeel Belgium, which operated with 1200 employees in Charleroi. [13] In November 2020, ArcelorMittal had decided to sell the unit. [14] [13]

  9. Institut de recherche de la sidérurgie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institut_de_recherche_de_la...

    The Institut de recherche de la sidérurgie (IRSID) is the old name of ArcelorMittal Maizières Research SA, a private research center related to the siderurgical society ArcelorMittal (originally (Usinor, then Arcelor)), founded in 1946 and situated at Maizières-lès-Metz, in Lorraine. [1] Two of the Institute's three centres were closed in ...