You are currently viewing the beta version of the new AMM site. Click here to return to the current site.
Results 1-10 of 928 for China coke. (0.135922 seconds)
relevance / newest first / oldest first
... plate and rebar in the United States, Western Europe, China and world ... next products could include hot-rolled band, iron ore and coking coal on the ... View this article
... China Beijing International Mining Exchange has already been running a platform for ... platform was launched in mid-March, with coking coal and ... View this article
... face additional downward pressure if prices for raw materials such as iron ore and coke fall further," a trader in Shanghai added. China's domestic H ... View this article
... AMM sister publication Metal Bulletin's coking coal indices were at $161.79 per tonne cfr Jingtang, China, for low-volatility material and $147.83 per ... View this article
SHANGHAI — China's iron ore imports rose in March but coking coal and ferrous scrap imports dropped, according to Chinese customs data ... View this article
China imported 56.42 million tonnes of iron ore ... supplier Australia fell 22.2 percent, Chinese customs data ... Iron Ore, Coal, Coke, Scrap, Steel, China ... View this article
SINGAPORE — The new coking coal futures contract on the Dalian Commodity Exchange saw 50.9 million tonnes traded ... Coal, Steel, China Watch,. ... View this article
... China's large state-owned steelmakers claim to have already installed the equipment necessary to reduce emissions, including coke-dry ... View this article
SHANGHAI — Chinese coke exports totaled 120,000 tonnes in ... the scrapping of the coke export tax ... the imports, because China's coke export base ... View this article
... haven't returned to their work after Chinese New Year ... or below $180 per tonne cfr China and mid ... total moisture, 55 to 60 percent coke strength after ... View this article
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | Next
What is causing the most weakness to the U.S. metals industry?
June 20-21, 2013 New York
Our industry and the U.S. economy are not realizing the full benefits of (higher steel demand) due to recent significant surges of imported tubular products.
--Mario Longhi, U.S. Steel