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Steel output in China sinks to lowest level in six months

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SINGAPORE: Steel output in China sank from a record, sliding to the lowest level in at least six months, as the anti-pollution drive touted in President Xi Jinping’s landmark policy address this week began to make its mark.

Output fell to 71.83 million tonnes in September from 74.59 million tonnes the month before, according to the statistics bureau yesterday, a day after Xi’s speech to the Communist Party congress reaffirmed his commitment to rolling back environmen­tal abuse. Over nine months, production was still higher than in 2016, rising 6.3% to 639 million tonnes, the figures showed.

China’s concerted drive to cut pollution from its old-industry factories, especially over winter, is roiling metals markets, and Xi referenced the policy in his address to the twice-adecade Communist Party congress. In steel, China’s output has proved resilient in the past year as although officials have shuttered some mills that fell short of standards, remaining producers boosted supplies in the run-up to wintertime curbs that have yet to fully kick in.

“We expect strict enforcemen­t of the winter supply-cut policies in order to guarantee planned reductions in pollution,” Citigroup Inc analysts including Tracy Liao said in a report received yesterday. The bank estimates total production losses of as much as 37 million tonnes from the winter shutdowns.

The bureau’s figures also showed a drop in production from China’s vast aluminum industry, which is facing winter cuts too. Output was 2.61 million tonnes last month, 5.6% less than a year ago, the bureau said. Citigroup has forecast supply cuts of 1 million to 1.5 million tonnes. China is the top producer of steel and aluminum.

The production data came with figures that showed gross domestic product was 6.8% in the third quarter, matching the estimate in Bloomberg survey. In his marathon speech, Xi mapped out a strategy for developmen­t to 2050 that emphasized the quality of growth over quantity or pace of expansion.

Steel dropped with iron ore yesterday. Futures for reinforcin­g bar, a product used in constructi­on, lost 2.2% on the Shanghai Futures Exchange as hot-rolled coil also fell. In Singapore, SGX AsiaClear iron futures were 2.5% lower at US$60.15 a tonne. OnWednesda­y, spot iron ore in Qingdao was at US$62.72 a dry ton, down from almost US$80 in August, according to Metal Bulletin Ltd. — Bloomberg

 ?? — AFP ?? Output falls: A file picture shows workers walking in a warehouse in the Han-steel plant in China. Chinese steel output fell to 71.83 million tonnes in September from 74.59 million tonnes the month before.
— AFP Output falls: A file picture shows workers walking in a warehouse in the Han-steel plant in China. Chinese steel output fell to 71.83 million tonnes in September from 74.59 million tonnes the month before.

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