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  1. 5 days ago · China approved no new coal-based steel projects in the first half of 2024, researchers said on Thursday, accelerating its shift towards green production as it prepares for the impact of a new ...

  2. 5 days ago · As of July 2024, that announcement has still not arrived. Instead, earlier this year H2GS started posting images online of the snowy groundworks under way in the vast wilderness of northern Sweden, where it is building a 740MW green hydrogen installation, direct-reduced iron (DRI) plant and green steel mill, powered by vast amounts of onshore wind and cheap Swedish hydropower.

  3. 3 days ago · This sponge iron will then be used to make steel using an electric arc furnace. The Ministry of Steel is supporting this project, part of a bigger effort to make steel production more eco-friendly. Currently, steel production in India mostly relies on coal, which creates a lot of carbon dioxide. This new method using hydrogen could change that.

  4. 1 day ago · The world’s largest producer of iron ore shipped 80.3 million tons (Mt) of the steel-making commodity from its Pilbara operations in the three months ended June 30, which though missed Visible Alpha consensus estimate of 82.1 Mt, was 3% higher compared to 78 Mt in the first quarter.

  5. 1 day ago · Multiple historic hydrogen occurrences in the region are widely considered to be sourced from the Rift’s underlying band of iron-rich rocks and migrate via faults to the crest of the ridge. The proposed Blythe 13-20 well is situated approximately halfway between the Mid-Continent Rift System and the crest of the Nemaha Ridge.

  6. 6 days ago · Pelt of Ralva is a Helm in Elden Ring. It is a brand-new Helm in the Shadow of the Erdtree DLC. Pelt of Ralva is part of the Iron Rivet Set, and grants players a feral look, with the pelt of the beast. Pelt of Ralva protect the player's head by applying various defensive properties, it also changes the appearance as well when it is ...

  7. 4 days ago · What used to be known, literally, as “the cutting room floor,” now exists as a digital bin, an assortment of deleted scenes, unused (and in today’s mode of industrial documentary production, perhaps even unviewed) footage — material that, through its absence, haunts any finished audiovisual work. Often when this material is ...