SPONGE IRON PLANTS: A NECESSITY OR
JUST ANOTHER MODE OF POLLUTION.
In the
years to come, India's expanding steel production will be largely driven by
sponge iron. But its manufacturing process, based on coal, is highly polluting.
The repercussions are already visible near sponge iron factories which have
mushroomed in iron ore- and coal-rich areas. People are protesting loudly, and
in some cases even violently, while the pollution control agencies look the
other way.
Protests are happening
because sponge iron is made through a process that is highly polluting and
poorly regulated. The Central Pollution
Control Board(CPCB) has
classified sponge iron as red category industry which denotes its high
potential to pollute. The classification means the industry needs strict
pollution norms and guidelines and should be monitored and inspected regularly.
On both these counts, the regulatory framework fails miserably.
History of sponge iron
Producing sponge iron and then working it was the
earliest method used to obtain iron in the Middle East, Egypt, and Europe, where it remained in
use until at least the 16th century. There is some evidence that the bloomery
method was also used in China, but China had developed blast furnaces to obtain pig iron by 500 BC.
How is it produced?
Direct-reduced iron (DRI), also called sponge iron,is produced from
direct reduction of iron ore (in the form of lumps, pellets or fines)
by a reducing gas produced from natural gas or coal. The reducing gas is a mixture
majority of hydrogen (H2) and carbon monoxide (CO) which acts as reducing agent. This
process of directly reducing the iron ore in solid form by reducing gases is
called direct reduction.
The conventional route for making steel consists of sintering or pelletization plants, coke ovens, blast furnaces, and basic
oxygen furnaces. Such
plants require high capital expenses and raw materials of stringent
specifications. Coking coal is needed to make a coke strong enough to support the burden in the
blast furnace. Integrated steel plants of less than one million tons annual
capacity are generally not economically viable. The coke ovens and sintering
plants in an integrated steel plant are polluting and expensive units.
Use of sponge iron
Sponge iron is not useful by itself, but can be processed to
create wrought iron. The sponge is removed from the furnace,
called a bloomery, and repeatedly beaten with heavy
hammers and folded over to remove the slag, oxidise any
carbon or carbide and weld the iron together. This treatment usually
creates wrought iron with about three percent slag and a fraction of a percent
of other impurities. Further treatment may add controlled amounts of carbon,
allowing various kinds of heat treatment (e.g. "steeling").
Today, sponge iron is created by reducing iron ore without melting
it. This makes for an energy-efficient feedstock for specialty steelmanufacturers which used to rely upon scrap metal.
Problems faced in India
due to Sponge Iron industries
The major problems with Indian sponge
iron industry are that these are mostly coal-based units. Coal based sponge
iron units are found to be extremely polluting. While globally gas based DRI is
regarded as cleanest one, in Indian scenario majority of them are coal based.
Sponge iron plants are categorized under “red categories3” industries which
mean they have higher pollution potentials and cause serious health hazards.
During operation it emits huge quantity of smoke containing oxides of sulphur
and carbon, un-born carbon and silica particles. Similarly the processes also
release extreme heat. The dust problem becomes aggravate when the electrostatic
precipitator is not operated. Solid waste disposal is another major problem in
sponge iron plants. Char, flue dust, GCP sludge and kiln accretions are the
solid wastes generated from DRI plants. Char comprises unburnt carbon, oxides
and gangue and is segregated from the product during magnetic separation. The
materials deposited on the inner surface of kiln, comprising metallic oxides is
called accretion. Flue dust is generated from air pollution control systems
like DSC, ESP and Bag Filter. Sludge is generated from the GCP, if the plant is
based on wet scrubber for dust treatment. The amount of char fines generated in
the sponge iron plants are high because of the non- availability of good grade
of coal in our country. The size of char varies in size of 0.5 mm to 3 mm and
is thus difficult to handle. Apart from this, it takes a lot of area for
disposal. A 100 TPD plants requires 10 acres of land annually for disposal of
solid waste. In the absence of land, the industries sometimes are dumping this
waste nearer to the crop filed, human settlement and in forest areas.Another
problem is sponge iron plants are being established very close to the main city
creating more severe impact on the health of human beings living near by it.
It has also been found that even if the sponge iron plants have the necessary pollution monitoring and control devices, there is lack of availability of competent manpower to run these systems.
It has also been found that even if the sponge iron plants have the necessary pollution monitoring and control devices, there is lack of availability of competent manpower to run these systems.
Effects on towns like
Durgapur
During the years
2001-2007 Durgapur saw the setting up of 10 to 15 middle/ large scale
industrial investment in iron and steel manufacturing sector including value
added products like sponge iron . The prominent investors in these sectors thus
favouring its growth.
Due
to all this a clean and green place like Durgapur is getting engulfed in the
hands of the deadly disaster called pollution.A place like Durgapur where skies
were once blue have now turned black; a place where once trees were more than
the number of people has been reduced to nothing more than a industrial and
pollution hub.
Maybe
in today’s world we cannot function
without industries like these but definitely we can do a lot to stop the
pollution caused by them.
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