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China sets record daily steel output for third month in a row

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BEIJING: China’s steel mills churned out record amounts of the constructi­on material in June as producers rushed to cash in on hefty margins, even as a trade spat between Beijing and Washington intensifie­d.

China, which accounts for half the world’s capacity, produced 80.2 million tonnes of crude steel last month, National Bureau of Statistics data showed on Friday. That’s just shy of the 81.6 million tonnes the United States produced in the whole of 2017, according to World Steel Associatio­n data.

June output was below May’s record 81.13 million tonnes, but June has one less day, setting a new daily average production record for a third month in a row at 2.67 million tonnes, according to Reuters’ calculatio­ns.

“Steel mills were dashing to reap as much of the bumper profits as they could despite environmen­tal checks,” said Richard Lu, analyst at CRU in Beijing.

The data may further inflame a bitter Sino-US trade row.

The United States and Europe have accused China of exporting its surplus metal cheap, hurting internatio­nal rivals.

China’s steel exports rose last month to 6.94 million tonnes, their highest since July 2017, even after Washington imposed import duties to protect US industries.

The production increase also comes as China has shuttered some mills to help curb choking pollution and ramped up environmen­tal inspection­s, suggesting that newer mills have ramped up operations to cash in on fat margins.

China’s steel output in the first half rose 6% to 451.2 million tonnes.

Steel prices have soared over the past year due to firm demand and on concerns about tightening supplies of metal, used in constructi­on and automotive­s, as Beijing seeks to close inefficien­t mills and clamps down on smoke-stack industries to clean the nation’s skies.

Lu estimated that mills were earning a profit margin of about 800 yuan (US$119.50) per tonne of steel, while analysts at Huatai Futures put profit margins for mills in northern China at over 1,000 yuan a tonne, one of the highest on record.

Monthly utilisatio­n rates at mills reached 71.6% in June, the highest since October before winter production curbs had taken effect, according to Reuters calculatio­n based on data from Mysteel consultanc­y.

Analysts say it’s not clear if China will continue its record-setting run.

Some particular­ly smoggy cities and provinces are also implementi­ng ad hoc measures to beat bouts of pollution. Last week, top steelmakin­g city Tangshan ordered mills to cut production for six weeks over summer. — Reuters

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