Developing nations can avoid building a legacy of corrosion costing trillions annually for infrastructure repair and replacement

Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials

ISSN: 0003-5599

Article publication date: 11 January 2011

105

Citation

(2011), "Developing nations can avoid building a legacy of corrosion costing trillions annually for infrastructure repair and replacement", Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials, Vol. 58 No. 1. https://doi.org/10.1108/acmm.2011.12858aac.002

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2011, Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Developing nations can avoid building a legacy of corrosion costing trillions annually for infrastructure repair and replacement

Article Type: Conferences, training and publications From: Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials, Volume 58, Issue 1

Using modern materials, including composites, could save as much as ¥6.8 trillion annually in 17 years when China could have the world’s largest economy.

Owens Corning, a leading global producer of glass fiber reinforcements for composite systems and residential and commercial building materials, presented a technical seminar at China Composites Expo highlighting how developing nations can avoid building a legacy of corrosion that will require spending enormous sums annually for infrastructure repair and replacement by using today’s advanced materials and processes including inherently corrosion-resistant fiberglass-reinforced polymer composites.

In China alone – if current construction practices are continued for the next 17 years when the country could become the world’s largest economy – China’s annual cost of corrosion could then be more than US$1 trillion (¥6.8 trillion). By employing optimum corrosion management practices today, China’s annual savings could then be as much as US$ 347 billion (¥2.4 trillion).

Estimates of the worldwide direct cost of corrosion today exceed US$1.8 trillion (¥12.2 trillion), or 3 to 4 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP) of industrialized countries. New material solutions have been developed since much of the corroding infrastructure was installed in developed nations. An estimated 25 to 30 percent of the annual cost of corrosion can be saved if optimum corrosion management practices are employed.

Using the 4-percent-of-GDP rate found in industrialized nations and estimating a 30 percent annual cost reduction for using optimum corrosion management practices, potential annual savings for other rapidly developing countries in 2027 could be as much as US$54 billion for Brazil, US$54.6 billion for Russia and US$130.2 billion for India.

“Developing nations can now avoid repeating the costly repair and replacement cycle by adopting modern materials and construction methods – including composites – that simply weren’t around when many more developed countries were building their core infrastructures,” said Jeffrey Xu, Marketing Leader for Greater China, OCV™ Reinforcements.

“With more than 50 years of field experience, FRP is now proven technology,” continued Xu. “Chemical storage tanks and pipe constructed with corrosion-resistant composites, for example, have consistently provided extended service life over those made with metals. There are many examples where composites have lasted more than 50 years and are still in service.”

Today’s composite materials have the potential to outperform those early applications, even in especially corrosive conditions. Boron-free Advantex® E-CR glass, for example, offers superior performance in composites facing corrosive environments when compared to standard E glass.

“In 2010, real infrastructure industry growth in China is expected to be 25 percent, reaching a total of more than US$168.5 billion (1 trillion Yuan),” concluded Xu. “We need to make sure a substantial portion of that money is invested in corrosion-resistant composite materials so China can avoid a legacy of high future costs for infrastructure repair and replacement.”

More information is available from: www.owenscorning.com

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