#NLMK

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viratsteelspecial-blog
viratsteelspecial-blog

Premium Quality Die Steels-From Italy to Ludhiana ( India )
Did you know ? Virat Special Steels now offers extra-large steel blocks — dimensions never before stocked in India.

Virat Special Steels, in collaboration with NLMK Verona, proudly brings India’s largest stock availability of extra-large steel blocks — up to 1300mm x 3000mm x 6000mm.

For the first time in India, industries can access unmatched scale and precision.

👉 What’s the biggest challenge you face in sourcing premium steel?
Let’s talk solutions.

Join us at MachAuto Expo 2026 to experience this breakthrough firsthand.
🔗 Learn more: www.viratsteels.com

Contact Us :-
📞 +91-9814021775 | ✉️ info@viratsteels.com

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viratsteelspecial-blog
viratsteelspecial-blog

European Tool Steel. Now Stocked in India.

Virat Special Steels – Authorised Distributor of NLMK Verona (Italy) – brings world-class European Tool & Die Steel closer to Indian manufacturers.

With ready stock available at:
📍 Gurgaon
📍 Ludhiana

We ensure:
✔ Authentic NLMK Verona Material
✔ European Metallurgical Standards
✔ Ready Stock for Faster Dispatch
✔ Precision Cutting & Value-Added Processing

When precision, durability, and consistency matter — trust NLMK Verona powered by Virat Special Steels.

From Tool Steels to Die Steels, we power industries across automotive, forging, casting, plastic moulding, and heavy engineering sectors.

👉 Looking for immediate availability or technical grades?
📩 Send us a message today.
📞 +91-9814021775 📧 info@viratsteels.com 🌐 www.viratsteels.com

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viratsteelspecial-blog
viratsteelspecial-blog

What an incredible experience !

Virat Steels & NLMK Verona team extending heartfelt thanks to all partners, clients, and industry professionals who stopped by our stall in Mach Auto Expo, Ludhiana.
Your trust and engagement made this event a true success.

The journey doesn’t stop here. Let’s turn conversations into collaborations.

Reach out us for Exciting offers .

Contact us for a meeting:
📞 +91-9814021775 📧 info@viratsteels.com 🌐 www.viratsteels.com

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etiennevangasse
etiennevangasse

📸 site de NLMK à Manage

Shooting du personnel à l’oeuvre. 

NLMK est le plus grand acteur sidérurgique au monde avec plusieurs sites en Belgique. 

Le site de Manage finalise plusieurs produits de NLMK Europe (aciers laminés à chaud, à froid, aciers galvanisés,…) destinés à la construction et à l’industrie de l’automobile notamment.

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investmart007
investmart007

WASHINGTON  | US firms seeking Trump's steel tariff waiver face a backlash

New Post has been published on https://is.gd/AgJ23P

WASHINGTON  | US firms seeking Trump’s steel tariff waiver face a backlash

WASHINGTON — U.S. companies seeking to be exempted from President Donald Trump’s tariff on imported steel are accusing American steel manufacturers of spreading inaccurate and misleading information, and they fear it may torpedo their requests.

Robert Miller, president and CEO of NLMK USA, said objections raised by U.S. Steel and Nucor to his bid for a waiver are “literal untruths.” He said his company, which imports huge slabs of steel from Russia, has already paid $80 million in duties and will be forced out of business if it isn’t excused from the 25 percent tariff. U.S. Steel and Nucor are two of the country’s largest steel producers.

“They ought to be ashamed of themselves,” said Miller, who employs more than 1,100 people at mills in Pennsylvania and Indiana.

Miller’s resentment, echoed by several other executives, is evidence of the backlash over how the Commerce Department is evaluating their requests to avoid the duty on steel imports. They fear the agency will be swayed by opposition from U.S. Steel, Nucor and other domestic steel suppliers that say they’ve been unfairly hurt by a glut of imports and back Trump’s tariff.

U.S. Steel said its objections are based on detailed information about the dimensions and chemistry of the steel included in the requests. “We read what is publicly posted and respond,” said spokeswoman Meghan Cox. Nucor did not reply to requests for comment.

The 20,000-plus waiver applications that the Commerce Department has received illustrate the chaos and uncertainty ignited by Trump’s trade war against America’s allies and adversaries. It’s a battle that critics of his trade policy, including a number of Republican lawmakers, have warned is misguided and will end up harming U.S. businesses.

Trump and European leaders agreed this past Wednesday not to escalate their dispute over trade, but the tariff on steel and a separate duty on aluminum imports remains in place as the U.S. and Europe aim for a broader trade agreement. The metal taxes would continue to hit U.S. trading partners such as Canada, Mexico and Japan even if the U.S. and the EU forge a deal.

Miller bristled over insistence by Nucor and U.S. Steel that steel slab is readily available in the United States. “That’s just not true,” he said.

His company isn’t the only one looking overseas for a product described as being consistently in short supply. California Steel Industries, a mill east of Los Angeles in Fontana, described the slab shortage as “acute” on the West Coast and declared that its waiver request is critical to its survival.

Aiming to rebuild the U.S. steel industry, Trump relied on a rarely used 1962 law that empowers him to impose tariffs on particular imports if the Commerce Department determines those goods threaten national security. He added a twist: Companies could be excused from the tariff if they could show, for example, that U.S. manufacturers don’t make the metal they need in sufficient quantities.

But there are hurdles to clear on the path to securing an exemption. A single company may have to file dozens of separate requests to account for even slight variations in the metal it’s buying. That means a mountain of paperwork to be filled out precisely. If not, the request is at risk of being rejected as incomplete. All this can be time-consuming and expensive, especially for smaller businesses.

The requests are open to objections. The Commerce Department posts the exemption requests online to allow third parties to offer comments — even from competitors who have an interest in seeing a rival’s request denied. But objections are frequently being submitted just as the comment period closes, undercutting the requester’s ability to fire back.

Willie Chiang, executive vice president of Plains All American Pipeline, told the House Ways and Means subcommittee on trade last week that his company had no opportunity to respond to objections that contained “incorrect information” before the Commerce Department denied its exclusion request. Chiang didn’t say who submitted the inaccurate information.

“The intent here is to restrict imports on a broad scale,” said Richard Chriss, executive director of the American Institute for International Steel, a free trade group opposed to tariffs. “It wouldn’t make sense from the administration’s perspective to design a process that readily granted exclusions.”

The Commerce Department declined to comment for this story.

Department officials have so far made public only a small number of their rulings.

An analysis of the numbers by the office of Rep. Jackie Walorski, an Indiana Republican and one of the most vocal opponents of the steel tariff on Capitol Hill, shows that 760 requests have been approved while 552 have been denied. The department hasn’t yet approved a waiver request that triggered objections, according to Walorski’s review.

The congresswoman’s office also examined the more than 5,600 publicly available comments and found they were submitted on average about four days before the end of the 30-day comment period. More than 50 percent of the comments weren’t delivered until 48 hours or less before the comment window closed. It took department an average of nine days to post comments online after receiving them, according to the analysis. The most prolific commenters were Nucor and U.S. Steel with 1,064 and 1,009, respectively.

A waiver request Seneca Foods Corporation submitted for tinplated steel it had already agreed to purchase from China was among the denials. U.S. Steel had objected, calling the tinplate a “standard product” that’s readily available in the United States. In fact, U.S. Steel said it currently supplies the material to Seneca Foods, the nation’s largest vegetable canner.

The New York-based Seneca Foods declined to comment. But in its waiver application, the company said domestically made tinplate “is of inferior quality to imported material.” Seneca Foods also said it’s unclear, at best, if U.S. suppliers have the ability or willingness to expand their production in the long term to meet the company’s annual demand for the material.

Philadelphia-based Crown Cork & Seal, a manufacturer of metal packaging for food and beverages, submitted a sharply worded attachment to its waiver application that anticipated pushback from domestic manufacturers. American steel mills, the document said, cannot meet aggregate demand for tinplate and have no plans to increase their capacity.

“We anticipate the U.S. mills will attempt to rebut this statement when they object to this exclusion request, but we encourage the Department of Commerce to see through their manipulative attempt to exploit the rules of the exclusion request process,” the application said.

Daniel Shackell, Crown Cork & Seal’s vice president for steel sourcing, said he’s not optimistic about the company’s chances of getting all 70 of its waiver requests approved. Eight have been granted so far primarily because the metal specified in those requests is not made in the United States. Twelve others have been denied, leaving 50 still to be decided.

“It’s hard not to interpret that the Commerce Department wants domestic suppliers to have an edge,” Shackell said.

Jay Zidell, president of Tube Forgings of America, a small company in Portland, Oregon, said he’s filed 54 exclusion requests and U.S. Steel has objected to 38 of them. U.S. Steel declared it is “willing and ready to satisfy” Tube Forgings’ demands for carbon steel tubing. But Zidell said the comments ignored past problems with metal quality and workmanship that led his company to sever a prior relationship with U.S. Steel.

Still, he’s worried the Commerce Department won’t approve all of the requests. Tube Forgings already has spent $600,000 on tariffs, he said, and may be on the hook for much more than that.

“The entire system is just screwed up,” Zidell said.

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By RICHARD LARDNER, Associated Press

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sochinetz-blog
sochinetz-blog

“Что б не перепутать” 😁 #Новокузнецкий #Металлургический #Комбинат #НМК #Новокузнецк 2002 год
“Not to mix up” 😁 #Novokuznetsk #Metallurgical #Combine #NLMK 2002

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theta-epsilon
theta-epsilon

My lovely fiance, yes he is eating an entire chicken

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theta-epsilon
theta-epsilon

Somebody please draw this screenshot of my boyfriend as Taako with a sleeping Angus. Its the first thing that popped into my head.

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theta-epsilon
theta-epsilon

So the other day my boyfriend cosplayed Anna from Frozen and made my little cousins so happy.

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fox-tsai-shen
fox-tsai-shen
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priceofliberty
priceofliberty

NLMK workers picket near Farrell plant

This article is a couple months old by now, but even by the end of June, a strike was being considered. With another round of negotiations failing in this week, a strike may be closer than ever. This plant contributes almost a fifth of all revenue.

The articles make it sound like “healthcare” is the only bargaining issue, but there are plenty more factors (like workers’ comp and FMLA) which play into that. Not to mention that the issues in the contract go beyond just healthcare. Some of these plants have buildings which are completely dilapidated, creating an unsafe work environment.

This is the mill I worked at during summers between college semesters. I have family who work here. The plant is now Russian-owned (NLMK) and they’ve used their vast resources to undermine fair negotiations for better compensation. Unfortunately, this union, like so many, faces many bureaucratic shortcomings but these laborers still face an unyielding, unreasonable employer. These people have been working since April, under no contract and having their contractual benefits (like healthcare) challenged.

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