Evraz Oregon Steel Mills
Subsidiaries | Colorado and Wyoming Railway, Colorado Fuel and Iron, Columbia Structural Tubing [1] |
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Website | Evrazna.com |
Footnotes / references Financial data.[2] |
Evraz Oregon Steel Mills is a subsidiary of the
History
Oregon Steel began as Gilmore Steel in 1926 when William G. Gilmore started the company.[3]
Thomas Boklund became president of Oregon Steel Mills in 1982, CEO in 1985 and chairman of the board in 1992.
In January 2007
In April 2020, Evraz Oregon Steel Mills stopped operating its Portland spiral pipe mill, leading to 230 permanent job cuts. This decision follows the gas and oil industry's downturn amid the coronavirus crisis.[9] 65 more workers were laid off in June 2020 at its North Portland mill.[10] This pipe mill had closed in 2009 and reopened in 2012 following the nation's boost in natural gas and oil drilling production.[11] The facilities in Oregon were using steel slabs imported from Russia, but importing steel from Russia became much more expensive (25% import tariff) during the Trump administration.[12] Evras Oregon Steel Mill is the only steel sheet mill west of the Rockies. Evraz was the largest carbon emitter of the city of Portland.[13]
As a result of
Operations
OSM operates a variety of
In Colorado, OSM's Rocky Mountain Steel subsidiary operates three production facilities. One facility makes rails for railroads, one rods and bars for construction, and the third plant manufactures seamless pipes. These facilities were part of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, founded in 1881 and bought by OSM in 1993.[20]
Bibliography
- Roger S. Ahlbrandt, The Renaissance of American Steel. Oxford University Press. 1996.
References
- ^ "Steel Shape Producers & HSS Producers". American Institute of Steel Construction. Retrieved 2008-11-12.
- ^ Oregon Steel Mills, Inc. Hoovers. Retrieved on March 28, 2007.
- ^ a b Humber, Yuriy (November 21, 2006). "Russia's No. 1 steelmaker buying Oregon Steel Mills". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ^ a b Jim Springhetti, Oregon Steel Mills' Boklund dies at 69, Oregonlive.com, 31 December 2008
- ^ Oregon Steel Mills Inc. reports earnings for Qtr to March 31. The New York Times, May 1, 1993.
- ^ Campoy, Ana. Evraz: US committee OKs Oregon Steel Mills acquisition. MarketWatch. Retrieved on March 28, 2007.
- ^ Jim Declusin steps down as Oregon Steel Mills CEO, Oregonlive.com, 6 February 2010
- ^ Richard Read, Evraz North America moving headquarters from Portland to Chicago, Oregonlive.com, 20 January 2011
- ^ Pete Danko, Evraz Oregon Steel Mills cutting 230 jobs in Portland, Bizjournals.com, 6 April 2020
- ^ Evraz will lay off another 65 at Portland steel mill amid ‘significant business downturn’, Oregonlive.com, 10 June 2020
- ^ Evraz Portland will fire up Oregon Steel mill closed in 2009, hiring 200, Oregonlive.com, 17 October 2012
- ^ Polina Ivanova, Russian steelmaker Evraz weighs up new U.S. rail mill, capex soars, Reuters.com, 19 October 2018
- ^ Nigel Jaquiss, Inside the Company That Would Pay the Biggest Share of the City’s Carbon Tax, Wweek.com, 27 january 2021
- ^ "Russia's Evraz looking to sell North American units". Reuters. 10 August 2022. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
- ^ OSM Rolling Mill. Oregon Steel Mills. Retrieved on March 28, 2007.
- Portland Business Journal, January 23, 2007.
- ^ OSM Tubular Retrieved on March 28, 2007.
- ^ OSM Tubular–Camrose. Oregon Steel Mills. Retrieved on March 28, 2007.
- ^ Columbia Structural Tubing. Oregon Steel Mills. Retrieved on March 28, 2007.
- ^ Rocky Mountain Steel Mills. Oregon Steel Mills. Retrieved on March 28, 2007.