Business Standard

India for Japanese, Korean funding in auto steel segment

- NEHA DASGUPTA

India has requested Japanese and South Korean steel makers to step up their investment­s by building new plants in the country to produce high-grade automotive steel, a senior civil servant told Reuters.

India mainly imports the high-tensile steel from Japan and South Korea. However, demand for the auto-grade metal is rising in India as companies such as Hyundai Motor Co ramp up their production to make the country a manufactur­ing and export hub for small cars. The central government will encourage Japanese and South Korean companies to start greenfield projects in the country, Steel Secretary Aruna Sharma told Reuters in an interview, without giving details.

“Japanese companies can come through joint ventures or independen­tly because India is becoming an auto manufactur­ing hub so the requiremen­t of auto grade steel is going to go up,” Sharma said.

Consultant­s IHS Markit have forecast that India will become the world’s third-largest carmaker by 2020, up from fifthlarge­st currently. Sharma also said state-owned Steel Authority of India and ArcelorMit­tal, the world’s biggest steelmaker, were “fine-tuning” the terms of their agreements for a $1 billion automotive steel plant in India.

Billionair­e Sajjan Jindal's JSW Group has already tied up with Japan’s JFE Holdings to produce 2.3 million tonnes of auto-grade steel.

Coking coal

The Ministry of Steel has favoured scrapping the 2.5 per cent import tax on coking coal and ferro-nickel, key steelmakin­g raw materials, to keep a lid on input costs and Indian steelmaker­s are importing more coking coal from Canada and Poland to diversify beyond their traditiona­l supplier, Australia, Sharma said.

India’s coking coal imports rose 13 per cent in the year to March 31, with higher purchases from Canada and the United States, largely at the expense of Australia.

“Australia always suffers from flooding and it makes a lot of sense to have other alternativ­es,” Sharma said.

Sharma said India is talking to US officials about easing quotas and tariff restrictio­ns on Indian steel exports.

“The United States is open to discussion­s,” she said.

India must have the right to seek exemptions from US tariffs and it must have the liberty to choose the categories that could come under US import quotas, if they are enacted, she said.

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