After the creation of
Pakistan in 1947, the
Government of Prime Minister
Liaquat Ali Khan realized the importance of the local production of iron and steel. Initially, the dependence on imports caused economic setbacks to the state in the form of high import costs. The initial idea and studies were conceived by the
Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (PCSIR) and put forward the concept to the
Five-Year Plans of Pakistan (1955–1960). In 1956,
Soviet premier Nikolai Bulganin offered technical and scientific assistance to Prime Minister Suhrawardy regarding the steel mills and expressed interest in establishing the country's first steel mills. The project was comprehensively debated in the governments of
Prime Minister Huseyn Suhrawardy and
President Ayub Khan. The manufacturing process, supply sources of the requisite machinery and raw materials, plant site, domestic ore versus imported ore, ownership pattern, product mix and all foreign financing credit kept the project on hold for a considerable time. The United States refused to give any kind of assistance. Finally, an agreement was reached with the V/O Tyaz Promexport of the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) in January 1969. In 1971, Pakistan and the Soviet Union finally proceeded to enter into a government agreement, upon which, the Soviet Union agreed to provide techno-financial assistance for the construction of a coastal based integrated steel mill at Karachi.
Labour development In 1956,
Krupp industries of
West Germany offered to set up a steel mill based on
Kalabagh iron ore, coal and most other minerals available within about . The project was dismissed by the
Ministry of Energy led by its minister
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto who accepted the Soviet studies instead as Bhutto favored the idea to establish one single enormous steel mill based 100% on imported steel and iron ore instead of local ore at Kalabagh District. In June 1966, another
West German steel firm, the
Salzgitter AG, produced ~5,000 tonnes of quality steel from 15,000 tonnes of Kalabagh iron ore in the presence of some international experts, and sold it to
Volkswagen. The company offered in August 1967 to set up Kalabagh Steel Mill of over 0.8 million tonnes per year capacity based on Kalabagh iron ore and imported coal at an estimated cost of Rs. 1.55Bn, including a foreign exchange cost of Rs. 878Mn. The European banks offered loans for this project, which confirmed the technical and financial viability of the project. All attempts were dismissed after projects were politicized enough in the civil bureaucracy. The Pakistan Steel Mills was established as an integrated steel mill under a programme called the
Nationalisation Programme in the 1970s. The foundation stone for this gigantic integrated project was laid on 30 December 1973 by Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto. The mammoth construction and erection work of the integrated steel mill, never experienced before in the country, was carried out by a consortium of Pakistan construction corporations under the supervision of Soviet and Pakistani experts. Khwaja Inayat Ullah was the Director of Operations & Chief Engineer of this project. (Blast furnace 1&2 & RMPP) The main production units were constructed with a host of infrastructure facilities involving unprecedented volumes of work and expertise. Component units of the steel mill numbering over twenty and each a big enough factory in its own right were commissioned as they were completed between April 1981 to August 1985, with the coke ovens and byproducts plant coming online first and the galvanizing unit last. The commissioning of Blast Furnace Number 1 on 14 August 1981 marked Pakistan's entry into the elite club of iron and steel producing nations. The project was completed at a capital cost of Rs. 24.7Mn. The completion of the steel mill was formally launched by President General
Zia-ul-Haq on 15 January 1985. Soviet scientist Dr. Mikhail Koltokof flew to Pakistan and settled in the country to provide training to Pakistan's technical staff. Engineer Niaz Muhammad and materials scientist Wahab Siddiqui received training in Soviet Russia and trained thousands of scientists and technical staff. Their inspirations and innovations led them to earn the highest award from Pakistan, and also from the Soviet Union. The Government of Pakistan conferred them with Pride of Performance. ==Dividends and business assets==