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International News Title: Chinese Steel: Inferior Inferior Steel imports from China that fall apart easily are making U.S. manufacturers and constructions firms more than a little nervous. Reports of failures during initial fabrication and questions about certification documents will mean closer scrutiny. The biggest concern is hollow structural sections widely used in construction of skyscrapers, bridges, pipelines, office, commercial and school buildings. This high-strength steel is also commonly used in power lifts, cranes, farm equipment, furniture and car trailer hitches. Failures of this tube steel has already happened in several California schools Chinese high-strength steel tubes and pipes are also a potential problem. Theyre used extensively in power plants and in large industrial boilers, and must withstand enormous pressures and hellish heat around the clock for weeks or months on end. This kind of steel also is used extensively in scaffolding thats erected on building exteriors during construction or renovation, as well as for interior work. Inferior high-strength steel could cause catastrophic failures of buildings, pipelines or in power plants boiler tubing. This is a large worry for structural engineers who will be working overtime as states embark on what amounts to a crash program to shore up bridges, following the collapse of the Minnesota span over the Mississippi River. China is already seeing problems. A Chinese power plant exploded recently when high-strength steel tubing blew out, says Roger Schagrin, general counsel for the Committee on Pipe and Tube Imports, which represents U.S. manufacturers of these products. The following from the Shanghai Daily HALF the steel material sold at wholesale markets and now being used in construction has failed quality tests. The Shanghai Industrial and Commercial Administrative Bureau inspected 52 batches of steel material at three markets and 15 construction sites in seven districts, including Xuhui, Zhabei and Baoshan, and officials said 27 batches had quality problems. The tested materials were too light to reach the countrys standard - some of the products were five times lighter than the required weight. Mr. Greed About 22 percent of the tested products failed tension tests. Buildings with such steel would not be able to withstand major earthquakes, the bureau said. Forty-eight percent of the tested material had inadequate amounts of carbon. Shortage of carbon can cause steel to break easily, officials explained. Bear in mind this point folks: The US is importing a lot of cheap inferior Chinese steel, up from almost nothing a couple of years ago. The importers include the US government! First it was food, then toys, then medicine, now steel. Greed has taken over throwing reason and common sense out the window.
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