Aditya Mittal
Analyst · Bank of America. Please go ahead Patrick
Okay, hi Ephrem, nice to hear from you. So, a lot of questions, but let me take a stab at them. So in terms of Calvert, Alabama, look, I think, the first headline is that we are in the process of commissioning our brand-new electric furnace. This is the most technologically advanced electric furnace in the United States with caster and hot-strip mill with the capability of producing exposed automotive grades. So in our minds, it is game-changing, it's just cutting edge, we've got a good cost base and then further strengthens our strong franchise that we have in the NAFTA region. We're building on that with electrical steel announcement this morning that we made. This is going to be 100% owned by ArcelorMittal. It's another world-class, cutting-edge, electrical steel facility for non-grade oriented steels for the premium automotive demand requirements with really good gauge capability and excellent quality characteristics. We are also looking at a second year, and your question was, does the electrical steel facility delay that? I don't believe it materially delays the second EAF. I think what we're focused on is commissioning the first EAF and then utilizing the resources that we have for the first EAF and staffing the project for the second year. So, that's fundamentally the plan. We're commissioning the first EAF, building another world-class, electrical steel facility in terms of electrical steels at Calvert and then we'll start on the second EAF. In terms of the medium-term CapEx and decarb, fundamentally, it's a great question. Our focus remains to keep the overall CapEx envelope between $4.5 billion to $5 billion. That's really the focus. And we have the ability to modify where we spend our CapEx, right? So you saw in the third quarter, we announced we are not going ahead with the Monlevade project in Brazil, instead, we substituted that with the electrical steel project in Calvert, Alabama. So similarly, I think you can expect developments like that where we see the market is changing or we can be more agile and dynamic in allocating where we want to invest our capital. And that also applies to decarb I'm not suggesting that all this growth CapEx will go into decarb, but perhaps based on acceleration of policy regulation that we want and in case that happens, we could have more than just $300 million of decarb CapEx per year. In terms of Liberia, look, that's a very good question. We have not changed our long-term assumptions of iron ore, and they remain conservative, especially compared to spot today. The reason why you don't have the same delta, I mean, you have a similar delta in terms of volume growth. But the reason why it is slightly less is primarily because of quality considerations, right? The five million tonnes is the DSO product, so there is a much lower Fe than the cilta-cel product that we will make. And so as we blend, we get some revenue uplift. So, maybe to explain more clearly today, the concentrate can do 15 million tonnes of concentrate and five million tonnes of DSO. The original plan was we lose the five million tonne on DSO and now the new plan is that we blend it and we have a 20 million tonne cilta-cel product. And so the delta is obviously, there's a positive on the volume side, offset by some of the changes on the revenue side. So we can provide you with more detail on the math behind that.