JAI BALAJI GROUP

Posted by Raju Singh On 2:11 AM 5 comments



Jai Balaji Industries Limited, the flagship company of the Jai Balaji Group, is a well known steel manufacturing company in the secondary sector in eastern India. Our group has a chain of value-added products which include Sponge Iron, Pig Iron, Reinforcement Steel TMT Bars, Alloy and Mild Steel Billets, Wire Rods and Carbon, Alloy and Mild Steel Heavy Rounds. Our company draws its strength from an old tradition of reliable customer service and quality products. Our group's manufacturing facilities are spread across four states - West Bengal (Durgapur, Ranigunj and Liluah), Chhattisgarh (Durg), Jharkhand (Kandra) and Orissa (Rourkela).

A pioneer in the steel industry, we successfully commissioned the first ever Sponge Iron plant in the state of West Bengal in the year 1999 and since then we have increased our capacity manifold and diversified our activities and areas of operation.






Iron Factory Deal

Posted by Raju Singh On 12:00 AM 5 comments

Iron is a chemical element with the symbol Fe (Latin: ferrum) and atomic number 26. Iron is a group 8 and period 4 element. Iron and iron alloys (steels) are by far the most common metals and the most common ferromagnetic materials in everyday use. Fresh iron surfaces are lustrous and silvery-grey in colour, but oxidize in air to form a red or brown coating of ferrous oxide or rust. Pure single crystals of iron are soft (softer than aluminium), and the addition of minute amounts of impurities, such as carbon, significantly strengthens them. Alloying iron with appropriate small amounts (up to a few per cent) of other metals and carbon produces steel, which can be 1,000 times harder than pure iron.




Sample of Iron

Iron-56 is the heaviest stable isotope produced by the alpha process in stellar nucleosynthesis; heavier elements than iron and nickel require a supernova for their formation. Iron is the most abundant element in the core of red giants, and is the most abundant metal in iron meteorites and in the dense metal cores of planets such as Earth.

Steel Industry

Posted by Raju Singh On 10:55 PM 4 comments

Steel industry reforms – particularly in 1991 and 1992 – have led to strong and sustainable growth in India’s steel industry. Since its independence, India has experienced steady growth in the steel industry, thanks in part to the successive governments that have supported the industry and pushed for its robust development. Further illustrating this plan is the fact that a number of steel plants were established in India, with technological assistance and investments by foreign countries. In 1991, a substantial number of economic reforms were introduced by the Indian government. These reforms boosted the development process of a number of industries – the steel industry in India in particular – which has subsequently developed quite rapidly.
The 1991 reforms allowed for no licenses to be required for capacity creation, except for some locations. Also, once India’s steel industry was moved from the listing of the industries that were reserved exclusively for the public sector, huge foreign investments were made in this industry. Yet another reform for India’s steel industry came in 1992, when every type of control over the pricing and distribution system was removed, making the modern Indian Steel Industry extremely efficient, as well as competitive. Additionally, a number of other government measures have stimulated the growth of the steel industry, coming in the form of an unrestricted external trade, low import duties, and an easy tax structure. India continually posts phenomenal growth records in steel production. In 1992, India produced 14.33 million tones of finished carbon steels and 1.59 million tones of pig iron. Furthermore, the steel production capacity of the country has increased rapidly since 1991 – in 2008, India produced nearly 46.575 million tones of finished steels and 4.393 million tones of pig iron. Both primary and secondary producers contributed their share to this phenomenal development, while these increases have pushed up the demand for finished steel at a very stable rate. In 1992, the total consumption of finished steel was 14.84 million tones. In 2008, the total amount of domestic steel consumption was 43.925 million tones. With the increased demand in the national market, a huge part of the international market is also served by this industry. Today, India is in seventh position among all the crude steel producing countries. The following are the premier steel plants operating in India: Salem Steel Plant at Tamil NaduBhilai Steel Plant at ChattisgarhDurgapur Steel Plant at West Bengal Alloy Steel Plants at West BengalVisvesvaraya Iron and Steel Plant in KarnatakaRourkela Steel Plant at OrissaBokaro Steel Plant at Jharkhand

Steel Projects Introduction

Posted by Raju Singh On 6:31 AM 2 comments

Steel Picture
Welcome to My Steel Projects Blog. Here you will find all kinds of information regarding Still and related projects.



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Kolkata, West Bengal, India

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