News
How crucible selection can lower energy bills and carbon emissions
Tweet
When it comes to selecting what crucible to purchase for your metal-casting process, what do you look for? Traditionally, these items have been seen as commodity products with the purchasing decision coming down to how low the number is on the price tag. When performance metrics were taken into account, it’s often just a rudimentary check on the lifetime of the product.
But the winds of change are blowing. Energy-intensive industries are under pressure from multiple directions. Energy costs are rising in many regions. It is however the increasing scrutiny of environmental issues – and particularly carbon emissions – that poses perhaps the greatest future challenge. In the EU, for example, changes are coming to the Emissions Trading Scheme that will likely push up carbon prices, while reducing the number of free allowances available to heavy industries.
And with growing urgency to efforts to limit global temperature rises, the EU may have pre-empted global action at COP26, taken place in Glasgow, UK, in November.
With this background, now is a good time to change how you view your crucibles, making them an ally in the fight against rising energy and environmental costs. The key consideration here is not the purchase cost or lifetime; it’s thermal performance.
Thermal performance is so important for a number of reasons. The headline benefit comes down to the simple fact that the higher the energy efficiency of your crucible, the lower your energy consumption. Which is good for both your energy bills and your carbon footprint. At one aluminium foundry, for example, switching to ENERTEK energy-efficiency crucibles helped reduce energy consumption by 13.4% and carbon emissions by almost 8,000 kg per year.
Source: Foseco
Tweet
Related News
- Your direct connection to top Chinese metalcasters and suppliers
- Brazil’s bauxite-gallium pact potent for an inflexion point in the global aluminium production
- International nickel prices continue to rise
- Why Trump wants to bring aluminum production back to the U.S.
- USA - Grede to close Alabama foundry
- German iron foundry appoints new CEO
- METAL PRICES - 03/2025
- World Foundry Summit 2025
- See all News