Creusot-Loire
Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Rail transport |
Founded | 1970 |
Headquarters | Paris, France |
Area served | Worldwide |
Products | Locomotives High-speed trains Intercity and commuter trains Trams People movers Signalling systems |
Creusot-Loire was a French engineering conglomerate, formed from factories in Le Creusot and Châteauneuf, Loire.[1] The Creusot-Loire subsidiary of ArcelorMittal also includes an Innovation, Research and Development centre for the group.[2]
History
[edit]The group was formed in 1970 as a result of Compagnie des ateliers et forges de la Loire (owned by Marine-Firminy) and Société des Forges et Ateliers du Creusot (owned by Schneider) merger.[3] The Société des Forges et Ateliers du Creusot had absorbed the Société métallurgique d'Imphy in 1968.[4]
The enterprise developed what has become known as the Creusot-Loire Uddeholm (CLU) converter process, which was developed to minimize the need of argon, and which was first erected on an industrial scale in the 1970s at Degerfors.[5]
The group was affected by the 1970s steel crisis,[3] and was not able to pay a dividend after 1977.[6]
In 1984 the organisation became bankrupt with debts of $633 million;[7] the company's owner Empain-Schneider rejected state aid as the conditions included giving away control of another subsidiary Jeumont Industrie.[6]
At some point near 2000, Imphy SA owned the Invar trademark.[8]
At some point, the organization may have been part of Usinor, which became in the 2001/2 restructuring the company known as Arcelor.
Before September 2003, the organisation had been renamed Industeel and absorbed by Arcelor.[9][10]
In September 2015, Industeel was touting its homogeneous armour products and its ballistic protection steel plates. It boasted that 5mm of its MARS 600 product could stop a NATO 7.62mm round at a distance of 10m.[11]
By February 2018, the organization had been rebaptized Industeel France and was then owned by ArcelorMittal.[12]
The French arm had been augmented by Industeel Belgium, which operated with 1200 employees in Charleroi.[13]
In November 2020, ArcelorMittal had decided to sell the unit.[14][13]
References
[edit]- ^ "FORM 20-F: Commission file number 001-35788 ArcelorMittal". United States Securities and Exchange Commission. 2015.
- ^ "Industeel, the right steel at the right price" (PDF). ArcelorMittal. March 2021. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
- ^ a b Claude 2001.
- ^ Société de Commentry - Fourchambault – industrie.lu.
- ^ Jalkanen, Heikki; Holappa, Lauri (2014). Seetharaman, Seshadri (ed.). "Converter Steelmaking". Treatise on Process Metallurgy: Industrial Processes. Elsevier. doi:10.1016/C2010-0-67121-5. ISBN 978-0-08-096988-6.
- ^ a b Lewis, Paul (June 14, 1984), "Creusot-Loire Spurns French Aid Plan", The New York Times
- ^ "Bankruptcy: Creusot-Loire Goes Under". Time. 24 December 1984.
- ^ "Special Alloy Valves for Corrosive Petrochemical Applications". Compás Servicios Globales SLU. Alloy Valve Stockist. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
- ^ "Industeel". European Monitoring Centre on Change. 12 September 2003.
- ^ "INDUSTEEL". British Stainless Steel Association. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
- ^ "Steel Solutions for protection applications" (PDF). ArcelorMittal. September 2015.
- ^ "Industeel France". European Monitoring Centre on Change. 26 February 2018.
- ^ a b "Vente d'Industeel : la CGT en appelle à l'intervention de l'Etat". Le Journal de Saône et Loire. 11 January 2021.
- ^ "ArcelorMittal se donne six mois pour vendre Industeel". Le Journal de Saône et Loire. 20 November 2020.
Sources
[edit]- Claude, Beaud (2001). "Le drame de Creusot-Loire : échec industriel ou fiasco politico-financier ?". Enterprises et Histoire (in French). 1 (27): 7. doi:10.3917/eh.027.0007.
- "Société de Commentry - Fourchambault", industrie.lu (in French), retrieved 2017-08-02