Deccan Chronicle

Steelmaker­s face hit on Europe deals after export tax

- SUDARSHAN VARADHAN & AFTAB AHMED

Indian steel firms could be forced to cancel European orders and suffer losses after an overnight decision to impose export taxes on steel products, V. R. Sharma, managing director at Jindal Steel and Power told Reuters.

India imposed an export tax of 15 per cent on eight steel products late on Saturday, at a time steelmaker­s are looking to make up for tepid local demand by increasing market share in Europe, whose supplies have been hit by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

"They should have given us at least twothree months of time, we did not know about such a substantia­l policy," Sharma told Reuters in an interview.

Sharma said Indian steelmaker­s have about 2 million tonnes in pending export orders, mostly to Europe, which are stuck in ports or in various stages of production.

"This could possibly lead to force majeures. And the customer has done no wrong here and he doesn't deserve to be treated that way," he said.

The decision could raise industry costs by as much as $300 million, he said.

"We alone have 260,000 tonnes of orders, which were taken when export duty was zero," Sharma said.

JSPL, India's fifth largest crude steel producer which competes with Tata Steel, JSW Steel, SAIL and ArcelorMit­tal Nippon Steel India, was targeting boosting its exports to up to 40 per cent of sales, mostly to Europe.

The export taxes on steel where part of a series of changes to taxes on crucial commoditie­s aimed at reining in retail inflation, which has hit eight-year highs.

A removal of import duties on coking coal, PCI coal and anthracite and imposing an export tax on iron ore, all key raw materials used in steelmakin­g, might not be enough to soften the blow to exports, Sharma said.

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