2024.09.11
POSCO to boost steel supply for Hardt Hyperloop project
By
Ko Dong-hwan, The Korea Times - POSCO is boosting its steel supply for the
world’s first hyperloop facility, as Hardt Hyperloop’s testing center in the
Netherlands has completed its initial construction phase and is set to progress
to the next stage, according to the company, Tuesday.
A
hyperloop is a high-speed transportation system that uses magnetic levitation
and low-pressure tubes to send pods carrying passengers or cargo at high
speeds.
POSCO
has supplied 352 tons of PosLoop 355 steel with a diameter of 2.5 meters for a
450-meter-long hyperloop test lane in Veendam in the Netherlands. The steel, 27
percent lighter than Hardt initially requested, is the world’s first steel
designed for hyperloop tubes. PosLoop has 1.7 times higher vibration absorption
than general steel and possesses excellent seismic performance, enhancing
stability, according to the company.
A
ceremony in celebration of the completion of the hyperloop test lane was held,
Monday, and the event featured high-profile guests, including Jens Gieseke, a
member of the European Parliament, Prince Constantijn of the Netherlands and
Hardt Hyperloop CEO Bertrand Van Ee.
Some
300 members of the European Hyperloop Center (EHC), a subsidiary project of the
Hyperloop Development Program jointly being pursued by Hardt and the Dutch
government, also joined the event.
The
EHC is equipped with a testing tube and research facilities for the
technologies’ standardization and further innovation.
Phase
B of the project — an additional 2.7-kilometer tube — is scheduled for
completion by 2027. It will enable the hyperloop to reach its maximum speed of
700 kilometers per hour, taking it one step closer to commercialization. POSCO
has agreed with Hardt to continue supplying specialized steels for the new test
tube.
POSCO’s
partnership with Hardt began in 2022 when POSCO International acquired a 6.1
percent stake in the company through an investment, securing rights to supply
the steel. The company signed a deal with the Dutch firm the following year to
cooperate not only on Phase B but also on future hyperloop projects across
Europe and the Middle East.
POSCO
stated that although flights and ships will remain essential for passenger and
freight transport in the era of carbon neutrality, travel between megacities
will increasingly depend on hyperloop technology, which offers greater energy
efficiency and speed.
“It is POSCO's mission to prepare for the rising
demand for new steels that will build the future public transports,” a POSCO
official said.
Source: https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/tech/2024/09/419_382263.html