Zenith Crusher Equipments In Romania
Romania possesses commercial deposits of a wide range of metallic ores, including iron, manganese, chrome, nickel, molybdenum, aluminum, zinc, copper, tin, titanium, vanadium, lead, gold, and silver. The development of...

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As a leading global manufacturer of crushing and milling equipment, Our Crusher and Grinding Mill equipments have been export to 120 countries and areas of Southeast Asia, East Europe, South America, the Middle East and Africa, etc, such as Kenya, Indonesia, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Peru, India.read more...
The Romania Mining Industry
Romania possesses commercial deposits of a wide range of metallic ores, including iron, manganese, chrome, nickel, molybdenum, aluminum, zinc, copper, tin, titanium, vanadium, lead, gold, and silver. The development of these reserves was a key element of the country's industrialization after World War II. To exploit the ores, the government built numerous mining and enrichment centers, whose output in turn was delivered to the country's large and ever-expanding metallurgical and machinebuilding industries. So in Romania, we can see many mineral crushing and grinding plants, and mineral processing production lines.
The major known iron ore deposits are found in the PoianaRusca Mountains and the Banat, Dobruja, and the Harghita Mountains. Great demands of iron ore bring great market and profit to local iron crushing and grinding plants owners.
In Romania, the Maramures range contains important deposits of polymetallic sulfides--from which copper, lead, and zinc are obtained--and certain precious metals. The Apuseni range holds silver and some of the richest gold deposits in Europe. Major copper, lead, and zinc deposits also have been discovered in the Bistrita Mountains, the Banat, and Dobruja. Bauxite is mined in the Oradea area in northwestern Transylvania. The downstream industry in the domestic and abroad have great demands to the mineral products. The supply is quite shortage, so many more investors tend to invest in this area these years.
Romania possesses commercial deposits of a wide range of metallic ores, including iron, manganese, chrome, nickel, molybdenum, aluminum, zinc, copper, tin, titanium, vanadium, lead, gold, and silver. The development of these reserves was a key element of the country's industrialization after World War II. To exploit the ores, the government built numerous mining and enrichment centers, whose output in turn was delivered to the country's large and ever-expanding metallurgical and machinebuilding industries.
The major known iron ore deposits are found in the PoianaRusca Mountains (a spur of the Transylvanian Alps) and the Banat, Dobruja, and the Harghita Mountains (in the Eastern Carpathians). Though commercially significant, these deposits were unable to satisfy the huge new steel mills that were the centerpiece of Romania's industrial modernization after the mid-1960s. Indeed, by 1980 Romania had to import more than 80 percent of its iron ore. Some experts predicted that domestic iron ore resources would be exhausted by the early 1990s.
Most of the nonferrous metal reserves are concentrated in the northwest, particularly in the Maramures Mountains (in the Eastern Carpathians) and the Apuseni Mountains (in the Western Carpathians). The Maramures range contains important deposits of polymetallic sulfides--from which copper, lead, and zinc are obtained--and certain precious metals. The Apuseni range holds silver and some of the richest gold deposits in Europe. Major copper, lead, and zinc deposits also have been discovered in the Bistrita Mountains, the Banat, and Dobruja. Bauxite is mined in the Oradea area in northwestern Transylvania. Although new mines to extract these ores continued to be developed throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the proclaimed goal of self-sufficiency in nonferrous metals by 1985 was unrealistic, considering that in 1980 foreign sources supplied 73 percent of the zinc, 40 percent of the copper, and 23 percent of the lead consumed by Romanian industry.
The country also has commercial reserves of other minerals, which are processed by a large chemical industry that barely existed before World War II. The inorganic chemical industry exploits sulfur obtained as a metallurgical by-product or refined from gypsum, an abundant mineral. There are large deposits of pure salt at Slanic and Ocna Mures. Caustic soda, soda ash, chlorine, sulfuric and hydrochloric acid, and phosphate fertilizers are among the chemical products based on domestic raw materials.
Zenith Products In Romania
Shanghai Zenith Company is one world- leading professional crushing and grinding equipments manufacturer, we have good market in Romania.
One customer from Bucharest purchased one 150tons per hour mineral crushing plant (made up by our GZD1100X4200 vibrating feeder, PE750X1060 jaw crusher and S51" cone crusher and vibrating screenns)use in the Apuseni Mountains. This year, he ordered many more spare parts for one year.
In some other areas, some other crushing and grinding machines can be fond, too. For example, the MTM160 grinding mill, the vibrating feeders. Most of them are unit machines.
To know more details and to find the best solution and suitable crushing and grinding equipments, just be free to contact us.








