Middle East Coated Steel Coil Procurement Guide: Common Specs, Grades & Ordering Standards

Learn about middle east coated steel coil procurement guide: common specs, grades & ordering standards in roll forming machines. Coil Guide guide covering

Middle East Procurement: What Specs Are Commonly Requested

Engineering & Specification Guide for Roll Forming Supply

The Middle East is one of the largest markets globally for:

  • Industrial roofing

  • Warehouse cladding

  • Logistics buildings

  • Infrastructure projects

  • Oil & gas facilities

  • Commercial steel buildings

However, procurement in the region is unique because:

  • Extreme UV exposure

  • High ambient temperatures

  • Coastal salt environments

  • Sand abrasion

  • Long design life expectations

  • Mixed specification systems (ASTM, EN, JIS, AS/NZS)

For roll forming manufacturers supplying coil or finished profiles into the Gulf (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain) and wider MENA region, understanding common specifications is critical.

1️⃣ Most Commonly Requested Base Metal Strength

G550 / 550 MPa Yield (Very Common)

High tensile steel is dominant in the region for roofing.

Why?

  • Thin gauges (0.42–0.50 mm BMT)

  • Long spans

  • High wind loads

  • Thermal expansion stress

G550 allows thinner steel while maintaining stiffness.

G350 / 350 MPa Yield (Structural)

Common for:

  • Purlins

  • C & Z sections

  • Solar mounting

  • Secondary framing

G350 is typically specified for structural roll formed components.

2️⃣ Most Common Coating Types

2.1 AZ150 (Aluminium-Zinc)

The dominant roofing specification in the Gulf.

Typical order:

G550 – AZ150 – 0.47 BMT

AZ150 performs better than standard galvanized under high heat and UV.

2.2 Z275 (Galvanized)

Common for:

  • Structural purlins

  • Interior framing

  • Non-coastal projects

However, in coastal GCC regions, galvanized alone may not meet durability expectations.

2.3 Higher AZ Coatings (AZ180 / AZ200)

Specified in:

  • Coastal industrial zones

  • Oil & gas facilities

  • Long-life commercial projects

Higher coating mass increases corrosion life.

3️⃣ Paint System Expectations

Prepainted coil in the Middle East often requires:

  • 20–25 micron top coat minimum

  • 5–7 micron primer

  • UV-resistant polyester or SMP

  • PVDF for premium projects

Due to extreme UV radiation, low-cost polyester systems degrade quickly.

4️⃣ Environmental Challenges Driving Specification

Middle East climate conditions include:

  • 45–55°C ambient temperatures

  • High UV index

  • Salt-laden coastal air

  • Dust and sand abrasion

  • High humidity in Gulf coastal cities

These factors drive demand for:

  • Higher coating mass

  • High tensile substrate

  • UV-resistant paint systems

  • Stronger corrosion warranties

5️⃣ Typical Roofing Coil Specification (GCC)

Common specification example:

ASTM A792 – Grade 80 / G550 – AZ150 – 0.47 mm BMT – PVDF 25µ – Slit Edge

Or EN equivalent:

EN 10346 – S550GD + AZ150 – 0.47 BMT – PVDF

6️⃣ Structural Purlin Spec Example

Typical:

EN 10346 – S350GD + Z275 – 2.0 mm – Mill Edge

Or ASTM:

ASTM A653 – Grade 50 – G90 – 2.0 mm

Mill edge often preferred in high tensile structural sections to reduce cracking risk.

7️⃣ Thickness Clarification (Critical in Middle East)

As in Australia and India, thickness confusion exists.

Always clarify:

  • Base Metal Thickness (BMT)

  • Total Coated Thickness (TCT)

Example:

0.47 mm BMT is common for roofing.

Misunderstanding thickness is a major import dispute issue.

8️⃣ Certification & Compliance

Middle East projects often request:

  • Mill Test Certificate (MTC)

  • SASO compliance (Saudi Arabia)

  • Civil Defense approvals

  • Project-specific consultant approvals

Specification clarity protects both supplier and buyer.

9️⃣ Roll Forming Engineering Implications

High tensile G550 + AZ150:

  • Significant springback

  • Higher forming load

  • Increased edge crack risk

  • Requires hardened rolls

  • Requires robust machine frame

Light-duty machines often fail under continuous G550 production.

🔟 Common Procurement Mistakes in the Region

  1. Using G300 instead of G550 for roofing

  2. Specifying Z coating in coastal environments

  3. Choosing thin polyester paint in high UV zones

  4. Not specifying coating mass (AZ150 vs AZ100)

  5. Not verifying yield strength in import contracts

  6. Ignoring slit edge quality in high tensile material

1️⃣1️⃣ Cost vs Durability Trade-Off

Lower coating mass reduces upfront cost but:

  • Shortens corrosion life

  • Increases repaint frequency

  • Damages reputation

Middle East clients increasingly demand long-term warranties (15–25 years).

Correct specification supports these warranty claims.

1️⃣2️⃣ Buyer Strategy (30%)

When to Specify G550 + AZ150

  • Industrial sheds

  • Commercial warehouses

  • Large roofing spans

  • Desert climate exposure

When to Upgrade Paint System

  • Premium commercial buildings

  • Coastal exposure

  • Color retention critical projects

When to Specify Higher AZ

  • Oil & gas facilities

  • Marine industrial zones

  • Long design life infrastructure

Exporter Strategy

Suppliers exporting into GCC should:

  • Align ASTM or EN spec clearly

  • Provide MTC with coating mass verification

  • Clarify BMT vs TCT

  • Offer UV-resistant paint systems

6 Frequently Asked Questions

1. Why is G550 common in the Middle East?

It allows thinner roofing panels with sufficient structural capacity under high wind loads.

2. Is AZ150 better than Z275 in the Gulf?

For roofing under high heat and UV, AZ150 generally performs better.

3. What paint system is preferred?

UV-resistant polyester or PVDF for long-term durability.

4. Is galvanized sufficient for coastal projects?

Often no. Higher AZ coatings or enhanced systems are preferred.

5. Should mill edge be specified for purlins?

Yes, especially for thicker structural sections to reduce cracking.

6. Are ASTM and EN both accepted?

Yes, depending on project and consultant specification.

Final Engineering Summary

Middle East procurement is driven by:

  • Extreme UV exposure

  • High temperatures

  • Coastal corrosion

  • Structural wind requirements

Most common roofing specification:

  • G550

  • AZ150

  • 0.47 BMT

  • UV-resistant paint

Structural purlins typically use:

  • G350

  • Z275 or higher

Correct specification alignment prevents:

  • Corrosion failure

  • Structural underperformance

  • Warranty disputes

  • Import contract disagreements

For roll forming manufacturers targeting the Middle East, material specification control is as important as machine capability.

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