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Steel is the backbone of military infrastructure, mining operations and modular construction.
It is strong, adaptable and fast to deploy.
It is also one of the worst materials you can leave exposed to the sun.
In hot climates like Australia, the Middle East or the US Southwest, unprotected steel becomes a heat battery. It absorbs solar radiation all day, stores it, then releases it inward and outward. That drives energy demand, thermal stress, corrosion and premature failure.
This is not an insulation problem. It is a surface physics problem.

Solar radiation is not just “heat.” It is a spectrum of energy:
Near-infrared carries most of the thermal load. When it hits steel, it is absorbed and converted into heat energy. Steel has high thermal conductivity and moderate heat capacity, so that energy moves quickly through the substrate and into the interior.
According to the US Department of Energy, solar heat gain through roofs and walls is a primary contributor to cooling loads in buildings
https://www.energy.gov/energysaver/energy-efficient-home-design
If you do not control radiation at the surface, you are already behind.
Military assets rely heavily on steel and aluminium:
Surface temperature does two things:
High surface temperatures increase infrared emission, which affects detectability. At the same time, the internal environment becomes harder and more expensive to cool.
The US Department of Defense has long recognised the need for energy resilience and thermal control in deployed infrastructure
https://www.energy.gov/eere/femp/federal-energy-management-program
Cooling systems consume fuel. Fuel supply chains create risk. Surface control reduces the load before mechanical systems even start.


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Mining operations operate in brutal environments:
Steel workshops, pipework, storage tanks and accommodation units all experience extreme surface heating.
Elevated surface temperature accelerates corrosion rates. As confirmed by NACE International, corrosion rates increase with temperature and environmental exposure
https://www.ampp.org/resources/what-is-corrosion
Where traditional bulk insulation is added to hot pipework, moisture ingress creates corrosion under insulation. Once moisture is trapped, corrosion continues unseen until structural failure occurs.
Surface control coatings that:
address both thermal stress and corrosion risk.

Modular steel buildings are growing rapidly across:
They are efficient to build.
They are inefficient thermally if untreated.
Steel skins exposed to full sun can exceed 70°C surface temperature. That radiant load transfers into the internal cavity before insulation even begins to slow conductive flow.
Research from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory demonstrates that high solar reflectance roofing significantly reduces surface temperatures and cooling energy demand
https://coolcolors.lbl.gov
The key point: once heat enters the substrate, you are relying on internal insulation and air conditioning to fight a battle that has already been lost.
Traditional building metrics focus on R-value and conductivity.
That only measures conductive heat flow through a material.
It does not address:
Surface control deals with the first moment of impact.
If radiation is reflected and infrared is blocked at the exterior envelope, the steel never reaches extreme temperature in the first place.
That stabilises the entire thermal system.
Military and mining assets are increasingly exposed to:
Surface temperature directly influences fire behaviour. Materials that reduce radiant heat absorption and provide certified fire ratings add a second layer of resilience.
Class A fire rated coatings contribute to roof and wall systems that reduce flame spread and radiant heat transfer. This becomes critical in remote operations where evacuation or rapid response is limited.
Standards such as ASTM E84 evaluate surface burning characteristics
https://www.astm.org/e0084-22.html
Surface control is not only about comfort. It is about asset protection.
Steel is not the problem.
Uncontrolled surface behaviour is.
In military, mining and modular sectors, the priorities are clear:
All of those begin at the outer 250 microns of the envelope.
Surface engineering is the first line of defence.
When you control reflectance, emissivity and thermal diffusivity at the exterior surface, you prevent heat load from entering the system. Mechanical systems then operate more efficiently. Corrosion risk reduces. Internal comfort improves.
That is not theory. It is applied thermal physics.
Steel will always conduct heat.
It will always absorb energy if left exposed.
It will always degrade faster when overheated.
Military deployments, mining infrastructure and modular builds operate in environments where surface temperature control is not optional.
The shift required is simple:
Stop treating steel like a passive structural element.
Start treating it like an active thermal surface.
Control the radiation.
Stabilise the envelope.
Protect the asset.
US Department of Energy – Energy Efficient Home Design
https://www.energy.gov/energysaver/energy-efficient-home-design
Federal Energy Management Program (FEMP)
https://www.energy.gov/eere/femp/federal-energy-management-program
AMP (formerly NACE International) – What is Corrosion
https://www.ampp.org/resources/what-is-corrosion
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory – Cool Roof Research
https://coolcolors.lbl.gov
ASTM E84 Standard Test Method for Surface Burning Characteristics
https://www.astm.org/e0084-22.html
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