Esfahan Steel Company
Esfahan Steel Company
Esfahan Steel Company is both the original and largest manufacturer of construction steel and rails in Iran, as well as the largest producer of long steel products in West Asia.
Esfahan Steel Company is sustained by a vast capacity of 3.6 million tons of steel, and produces all forms of construction and industrial steel products; whereby, the Esfahan Steel Factory was established in 1971, in the southwest of Isfahan province.
The company has played a major role in the formation of other companies in the Iranian steel industry, and is therefore considered the founder of the country's steel industry.
The company's products are exported to more than 23 European, Asian and African countries; while in the domestic market, these products have been used in some of the country’s largest construction projects. These include the Milad Tower in Tehran, the Bushehr nuclear power plant, large dams and subways; and the company's railway products will soon be used in the Iranian railways.
The company’s products are identifiable by the abbreviation ‘ESCO’ on the beam wing, and between the rebar treads.
The major products of Esfahan Steel Company are:
Steel products: parallel flanges, beams (IPE) and parallel flange (H) beams, plain-ribbed rebars, studs, rails and ingots.
Industrial products: all forms of industrial coils, across a variety of steel grades, such as: USD7, RSD7, RST34-2 C67, 70CR2, CK45, CK35, SWRH — and more, according to customers’ orders.
By-products: solid cast iron, tar, xylene, toluene, benzene, ammonium sulfate, coke, steel slag and blast furnace, wet steel dust (industrial sludge), lime, gas, liquid oxygen, liquid nitrogen, and other minor products.