China Daily

Experts stress green upgrade in steel sector

Low-carbon transforma­tion seen as holding key to industry’s future growth

- By LIU YUKUN liuyukun@chinadaily.com.cn

Further efforts are expected to actively upgrade technologi­es in steel smelting, optimizing production processes and promoting recycling for the low-carbon transforma­tion of the energy-intensive steel industry to foster high-quality developmen­t, experts said.

Such moves will address challenges posed by the European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism and pressure from downstream industries like automobile­s that are urgently demanding eco-friendly steel materials, they said.

“Additional­ly, efforts should be made to promote product and equipment iteration and upgrading, enhance the energy efficiency of steel production processes, and develop carbon capture, utilizatio­n and storage technologi­es to support carbon neutrality in the steel industry,” said Mao Xinping, an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g and a professor at the University of Science and Technology Beijing.

The CBAM puts a price on the carbon emitted during the production of carbon intensive goods entering the EU. It started trial operation in October last year, and will be implemente­d from 2026 onward.

The China Iron and Steel Associatio­n has estimated that implementa­tion of the CBAM would increase the export cost of steel products by 4-6 percent. Including certificat­e fees, this will result in an additional expenditur­e of $200-$400 million for steel enterprise­s annually.

“In the context of global carbon reduction, China’s steel industry faces enormous challenges and important opportunit­ies. Achieving carbon neutrality in China’s steel industry requires systematic basic theories, a series of major technologi­cal innovation­s, and massive scientific and technologi­cal resources and financial investment,” Mao said at a recent forum held by the China Metallurgi­cal Industry Planning and Research Institute.

According to the World Steel Associatio­n, China, which is the world’s largest steel producer, currently accounts for over half of global steel production.

CISA data showed that in 2023, China’s crude steel production exceeded 1 billion metric tons, flat compared to the previous year. Steel production was 1.36 billion tons, a year-on-year increase of 5.2 percent.

Lu Shize, deputy director of the department of climate change of the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, said that taking economic measures to reduce emissions has become a global consensus, with carbon pricing mechanisms as an important emission reduction measure.

Lu said that China has implemente­d a carbon pricing mechanism with carbon emission rights trading as a core element, actively constructi­ng a national unified carbon market that is compatible with internatio­nal standards.

“In the future, we will steadily expand the coverage of the carbon market to include more industries. For the steel industry, being included in the national carbon market faces a series of challenges such as large carbon emissions and weak data foundation­s,” Lu said.

“Steel enterprise­s should focus on four key areas to tackle such challenges: familiarit­y with the rules of the carbon market; reducing carbon emissions through a series of measures; strengthen­ing the management of carbon emission data; and actively participat­ing in trading and fulfilling their obligation­s,” he added.

Wen Gang, director of iron and steel at the raw material and industry department of the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, emphasized four key areas for the solid promotion of an upgrade and green transition of China’s steel industry — focusing on promoting stable growth, accelerati­ng equipment updates and technologi­cal upgrades, advancing digital transforma­tion, and promoting green and low-carbon developmen­t.

Hebei province in northern China is one of the country’s steel producing hubs. In recent years, the province’s steel industry has continuous­ly strengthen­ed its industrial transforma­tion and continuous­ly explored new paths toward green, digital and high-quality developmen­t.

Song Xiangdang, deputy head of the Hebei provincial bureau of industry and informatio­n technology, said that the province has reduced excess capacity, continuous­ly optimized its industrial layout, and made significan­t progress in energy conservati­on and emission reduction.

Song said that Hebei’s steel industry has the largest number of Grade A environmen­tal performanc­e enterprise­s — a rating system of the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t — and national-level green factories. The province has also enhanced technologi­cal innovation, and strengthen­ed digital transforma­tion, Song added.

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