Skip to content
World Corrosion Day
World Corrosion Organization · 24 April

The slow fire that eats steel

Every refined metal wants to return to its ore. Corrosion is that return — an electrochemical reaction that quietly costs the world an estimated US$2.5 trillion every year. This is a field guide to understanding it, preventing it, and the global day that puts it in the spotlight.

US$2.5T
estimated cost of corrosion worldwide, each year
3.4%
of global GDP, lost to corrosion
15–35%
of that cost is avoidable today
Field guide

Refined metal, returning to ore

Iron is dug from the ground as oxide. We pour energy into it to make steel — and the moment it leaves the mill, the metal begins spending that energy back, reacting with oxygen and water to become oxide again. We call the process corrosion, and it never stops. It only slows or speeds up.

Corrosion is not a curiosity. It thins pipelines until they leak, weakens bridges until they fail, and pits the hull of every ship at sea. Yet most of its damage is preventable with knowledge that already exists. This site gathers that knowledge — the science, the prevention, and the people working on it — and points you toward the conferences where the field meets, curated at Corrosion Congress.

Start here

The field, in sections

Six entry points into corrosion science and practice. Each opens a deeper set of pages.

Every 24 April

A day for a silent problem

World Corrosion Day was established by the World Corrosion Organization to draw public and industrial attention to a problem that, by its nature, is invisible until something breaks.

Each year on 24 April, technical societies, universities and companies host lectures, open laboratories and campaigns to show that corrosion is understood, measurable and — to a large degree — preventable.

24·04 — awareness day
24·04awareness day

Why it matters, in numbers

US$2.5T
Estimated direct cost of corrosion each year
NACE IMPACT, 2016
3.4%
Share of global GDP lost to corrosion annually
NACE IMPACT, 2016
15–35%
Of that cost avoidable with existing corrosion control
NACE IMPACT, 2016
24 Apr
World Corrosion Day, observed worldwide
World Corrosion Organization
Community

Who is working on corrosion

Corrosion is fought by a worldwide community: the World Corrosion Organization, AMPP (formerly NACE and SSPC), the European Federation of Corrosion, and dozens of national societies.

It is also strong in Latin America — for example the corrosion and materials groups at the Universidad de Antioquia in Colombia. Our directory maps them, and links to where they gather.

ORG — directory
ORGdirectory
corrosioncongress.com

Where the field meets

From cathodic-protection workshops to pipeline-integrity summits and AMPP certifications, Corrosion Congress is the global directory of corrosion events — across 50+ countries and six languages. Find the next one near you.

Common questions

Corrosion, briefly

What is corrosion?

Corrosion is the gradual destruction of a material — usually a metal — by chemical or electrochemical reaction with its environment. For iron and steel it shows up as rust, the metal reverting to iron oxide. Learn the fundamentals.

When is World Corrosion Day?

World Corrosion Day is observed every year on 24 April, an initiative of the World Corrosion Organization to raise awareness of corrosion's impact. See how it began.

Why does corrosion matter?

Corrosion costs an estimated US$2.5 trillion a year — about 3.4% of global GDP — and threatens safety in pipelines, bridges, ships and aircraft. Studies suggest 15–35% of that cost is avoidable with known methods.

Can corrosion be prevented?

Largely, yes. Protective coatings, cathodic protection, corrosion inhibitors, smart material selection and good design all slow or stop it. Explore corrosion protection.

Keep exploring