-
The U.S. Defense Department’s scrap sales auction program valued an offering of zinc and lead aircraft wing molds at 83 cents a pound last week.
-
A Friday influx of $6.7 million worth of aluminum die-casting alloy boosted North American inventories warranted for London Metal Exchange use by more than 2 percent.
-
Italian scrap prices could increase despite low demand after authorities seized at least four shredders in northern Italy last week.
-
A Friday influx of $6.7 million worth of aluminum die-casting alloy boosted North American inventories warranted for London Metal Exchange use by more than 2 percent.
-
Prices paid for dealer grades of ferrous scrap started the month on a level playing field but were tilting downward as the week progressed.
-
Aluminum One of Alabama Inc., a secondary smelter in Scottsboro, Ala., that inherited some equipment from an earlier company, has begun selling metal but is close-mouthed about the details.
-
Aluminum One of Alabama Inc., a secondary smelter in Scottsboro, Ala., that inherited some equipment from an earlier company, has begun selling metal but is close-mouthed about the details.
-
Turkish steel mills returned to the deep-sea ferrous scrap market last week, sending prices approximately $5 a tonne higher than previous deals three weeks earlier.
-
Wise Metals Group LLC has entered into a financing deal that opens the door to an Alabama agency gaining a 25-percent stake in the company.
-
As part of an enforcement settlement with a secondary lead smelter in Laureldale, Pa., Pennsylvania’s environmental agency has required its owner, Exide Technologies, Alpharetta, Ga., to create an environmental management program that meets international standards and is certified by an outside auditor.
-
The average auction price of brass ammunition scrap from the U.S. Defense Department has fallen to $2.26 a pound from $2.52 in mid-September, although some of the decline might be due to the generally modest size of the 10 lots being offered.
-
Circuit City Stores Inc. has increased its participation in Rechargeable Battery Recycling Corp.’s Call2Recycle program, a collection and recycling program for rechargeable batteries and old cell phones sponsored by Atlanta-based RBRC.
-
As part of an enforcement settlement with a secondary lead smelter in Laureldale, Pa., Pennsylvania’s environmental agency has required its owner, Exide Technologies, Alpharetta, Ga., to create an environmental management program that meets international standards and is certified by an outside auditor.
-
Wise Metals Group LLC has entered a financing deal that opens the door to an Alabama agency gaining a 25-percent stake in the company.
-
Circuit City Stores Inc. has increased its participation in Rechargeable Battery Recycling Corp.’s Call2Recycle program, a collection and recycling program for rechargeable batteries and old cell phones sponsored by Atlanta-based RBRC.
-
Wise Metals Group LLC has entered a financing deal that opens the door to an Alabama agency gaining a 25-percent stake in the company.
-
Secondary aluminum ingot and the scrap it comes from have shown pricing stability during the past week.
-
U.S. exports of nickel scrap opened the second half of the year by retreating 45.8 percent from the record tonnage shipped in June, although the tally was still ahead of the trend line of the previous two years.
-
Secondary aluminum ingot and the scrap it comes from have shown pricing stability during the past week.
-
Sims Group Ltd. has appointed Graham Davy chief executive officer of its European business and Sims Recycling Solutions, its global electronics recycling arm.
-
The purchase of scrap processor OmniSource Corp. by Steel Dynamics Inc. (SDI) underscores the importance of being diversified into raw materials, Stanley A. Rabin, chairman of Commercial Metals Co. (CMC), said Tuesday.
-
The purchase of scrap processor OmniSource Corp. by Steel Dynamics Inc. (SDI) underscores the importance of being diversified into raw materials, Stanley A. Rabin, chairman of Commercial Metals Co. (CMC), said Tuesday.
-
The Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries (ISRI), which has tried to raise the visibility of railroad problems on Capitol Hill, will assess specific pieces of legislation it might wish to endorse during four days of committee and director meetings starting Oct. 17 in Boston.
-
The Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries (ISRI), which has tried to raise the visibility of railroad problems on Capitol Hill, will assess specific pieces of legislation it might wish to endorse during four days of committee and director meetings starting Oct. 17 in Boston.