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2026 Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei Scrap Steel Industry Development Conference | A New Engine for Green Manufacturing: High-Efficiency Solutions for Scrap Steel Processing

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Release time:2026-03-28 00:00

Fragmented equipment lines continue to define much of today’s scrap steel processing landscape. Machines operate. Systems don’t. The result: unstable throughput, energy waste, and hidden maintenance escalation.

On March 27, 2026, the 4th Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei Scrap Steel Industry Development Conference, together with HBIS Group Supply Chain Co., Ltd. Client Promotion Event, brought together associations, leading steel enterprises, financial institutions, and technology providers. The agenda centered on green manufacturing, digital coordination, financial compliance, and industrial restructuring — all under the pressure of carbon reduction targets.

A clear signal emerged: scrap steel is no longer a secondary material flow, but a strategic resource within the carbon transition of the steel industry. Efficiency is no longer measured at the machine level, but across the entire processing system.

SIMVIC enters this context not as a machine supplier, but as a Plant Builder. The focus is not on isolated performance, but on system architecture. Crushing, separation, shearing, and baling are interdependent energy nodes. Without alignment, every mismatch becomes a persistent operational burden.

Through system-level engineering, SIMVIC structures material flow as a controlled process rather than a sequence of reactions. Load distribution stabilizes. Energy matching improves. Bottlenecks are removed at the design stage, not after failure.

This architecture supports a high-throughput material refining platform capable of sustained cross-scale operation. More importantly, it extends asset life and reduces operational volatility — two variables directly tied to capital efficiency.

During the conference, SIMVIC presented its engineering logic alongside industrial case references. The discussion shifted from equipment performance to system reliability — where real cost control begins.