In 2018, ArcelorMittal delivered one
of its best financial performances in recent years and the safest year
in its 13-year history, but will need to invest in cleaner technologies
to ensure a sustainable future, according to the steelmaker's newly
released Integrated Annual Review 2018.
Last
year, the Luxembourg-based steelmaker had an injury frequency rate of
0.69 incidents per million hours worked, down from 0.79 per million
hours in 2017 and 0.83 per million hours in 2016.
"Our
2018 lost-time injury frequency rate of 0.69 was the lowest level we
have ever recorded," Chairman Lakshmi Mittal said in the report. "This
figure betters industry standards and has vastly improved over the past
decade, proving that our safety policies and procedures are strong and
the safety training that we consistently deploy through our global
operations is making a positive difference."
Ten ArcelorMittal steelworkers still were killed on the job last year.
"We
must do better. Nothing is more important than the health and safety of
our employees," Mittal said. "Our performance in several of our
reporting segments proves that zero fatalities, which is our objective,
is possible. I’m therefore convinced this can
become a reality and can reassure you that we are fully focused on
achieving this objective group-wide. Continuing to progress our efforts
to instill a safety-first culture at all our global operations is
critical to future progress."
The
steelmaker, which has integrated steel mills in East Chicago and Burns
Harbor, turned a net profit of $5.1 billion on revenue of $10.3 billion
in 2018 amid improved global market conditions.
"For many years the global steel
industry has suffered from chronic overcapacity," Mittal said. "While
this challenge persists, the significant, permanent supply-side reform
we have witnessed in recent years has gone some way to delivering the
structural improvement necessary to ensure sustainably healthy market
conditions. We also saw a continuing response
last year from governments worldwide to address unfair trade,
particularly the Section 232 measures that were introduced in the United
States and the EU safeguard measures imposed in response."
But
steel prices have been falling since peaking last summer, and dropped
by about $30 a ton in the United States just last week.
"Market
conditions softened towards the end of 2018, with these dynamics
carrying into the beginning of this year," Mittal said. "However,
general market dynamics are still positive and we forecast continuing
demand growth in 2019. The structural industry
improvement I discussed earlier has enhanced the steel industry’s
resilience, reducing an element of volatility, although overcapacity
does remain and we continue to see elevated levels of imports into our
markets, particularly in Europe."
ArcelorMittal
also will need to try to reduce its carbon footprint as governments
across the global pressure heavy industry to lower its emissions. That
will require investment in new technology and could mean major changes
for how steel mills operate, Mittal said.
"For
the steel industry that is no easy task. Decarbonizing steelmaking will
depend on fundamentally changing how steel is made," Mittal said. "It
will involve advancing breakthrough technologies that either capture and
store or re-use carbon; replace coal with alternative, sustainable
sources of carbon; or use hydrogen as an agent to reduce iron ore, hence
removing carbon from the steelmaking process entirely. We are
developing a low-emissions technology strategy, on which we will
elaborate in our inaugural climate action report that will shortly be
published and are currently building several industrial-scale pilot
projects, based on smart carbon or zero-carbon technologies."