DB Cargo to purchase wagons for steel logistics

freight wagons DB Cargo signed a ten-year contract with ArcelorMittal to supply of its blast furnace at Eisenhüttenstadt steel plant and will invest in logistics through the acquisition of freight wagons. Under the contract which runs until 2031, DB Cargo will ensure that raw materials are delivered to one of Germany’s largest sites in the steel industry.

DB Cargo is currently investing in world-class logistics for its customer. By next summer, it will purchase 352 multi-functional double wagons and 1,408 special containers to transport ore, coke and limestone. Its partner, the logistics provider Innofreight, designed the wagons and optimised their load volume specifically for these raw materials. Innofreight will also build two semi-automated loading and unloading facilities at the Eisenhüttenstadt plant by summer 2021 and will operate them itself.

The new transports will begin as soon as the facilities are completed. DB Cargo will then be able to transport up to 4.2 million tonnes of raw materials a year.

The German transport operator has supplied ArcelorMittal with raw materials and transporting finished steel to customers, in particular in the automotive industry and plant engineering, and now DB Cargo is “investing a considerable sum in this long-standing partnership. Our new freight wagons for ArcelorMittal will have an especially durable underframe, while the removable superstructure is designed to be flexible so that it can be replaced more frequently. And if that weren’t impressive enough, we will also be able to customise the superstructure as requirements change,” Pierre Timmermans, Management Board Member responsible for Sales at DB Cargo said.m

ArcelorMittal Eisenhüttenstadt, Germany, is implementing one the most state-of-the-art raw materials logistics systems in Europe. The company says that it will be able to increase the net load of each trains by 20% by using special types of containers that are optimised for the different properties of ore, coke and limestone. “That means we will need far fewer trains, which will protect the environment and reduce shunting at the depot. What’s more, automated loading and unloading of trains means less dust and less noise at the workplace, which benefits employees. We’re setting new standards in efficiency, environmental protection and occupational safety with this new system,” Sybille Klipstein, Lead Buyer for Rail at ArcelorMittal said.

 


Share on:
Facebooktwitterlinkedinmail

 

RECOMMENDED EVENT: