Our product-Billet
We produce Billets with top quality. Contact with us to start with a quality product.
Billet
Billets are folded into long wire-like structures, and steel bars get shaped. These hold all the characteristics of steel billets like their quality and solidness. They are significantly used in the construction of buildings. But according to their shapes and size, they can be used in military weapons, building vehicles, and so on. Most well-known kinds of steel bars are TMT bars. Steel billets are the second stage product produced during the time process of making steel bars. The raw steel can’t be utilized in its pure form; it needs to be cast into shape before it is employed. The newly created steel, which is still as a metal bar or square shape, is called steel billet. Billets are not of reasonable use until they are framed into increasingly practical sh…
Better steels for the
environment and humans
What motivates us every day is making sure steel remains the most widely used and used material in the world. Steel must decarbonize if that is to continue to be the case. We are eager to have the chance to significantly lower world emissions, so we are embracing this with vigour and dedication. We want to lead the decarbonization of our sector by combining our technical expertise with an innovative mentality and a passion for positively affecting people and the environment.
The fourth new episode of Futurising season two is now available!
A podcast series called “Futurising” features professionals from ArcelorMittal who are heavily invested in the future of steel. In this second instalment, members of our executive management team talk about our plan to achieve net zero by 2050 with applied futurist Tom Cheesewright.
We will double our production capacity by 2030
A podcast series called “Futurising” features professionals from ArcelorMittal who are heavily invested in the future of steel. In this second instalment, members of our executive management team talk about our plan to achieve net zero by 2050 with applied futurist Tom Cheesewright.