Khaleej Times

Iran imports threaten Europe steel industry

- Barbara Lewis

london — Iranian steel imports have become the latest threat to European steelmaker­s, their trade group said, after imports from Iran rose by nearly eight times between 2013 and 2016.

Steel lobby group Eurofer has said that Iranian exports to Europe had leapt to just over one million tonnes annually, putting the country just behind India at 1.9 million tonnes, while China shipped 5.7 million tonnes in 2016.

“The threat from Iran is new and it’s going to be one of the top three issues: China, India, Iran,” Karl Tachelet, external relations and trade director at Eurofer, said.

Iran has sought to boost its steel sector, with help from foreign partners, as it targeted economic expansion following the 2015 deal to curb Iran’s nuclear programme in return for an easing of sanctions.

But Tehran has said it is considerin­g export duties on iron ore, as India has done, which would increase the availabili­ty of cheap raw materials for its own steelmaker­s. Eurofer, which represents an industry that has to import its iron ore, says that amounts to protection­ism.

On Wednesday, after a two-day conference on steel in Tehran, Iran said it aims to export between 20 and 25 million tonnes annually by 2025 and to increase total output to 55 million tonnes from an estimated 16 million tonnes now.

That compares with a global market of 1.6 billion tonnes.

China, the world’s top producer and consumer of steel, is a dominant player in Iran, where other countries have struggled with the complexity of political and logistical hurdles.

And while cutting its own capacity, China has been building steel operations elsewhere, including on the edge of the European Union in Serbia.

The EU is investigat­ing alleged dumping of hot-rolled steel by producers in Serbia and Iran as well as Brazil, Russia and Ukraine. It has already imposed penalties on China, prompting an angry response and a WTO complaint from Beijing.

Eurofer says EU measures against nations such as China have helped to revive an industry that was deeply in crisis in late 2015 and early 2016 when steel prices were very low.

Prices have since recovered, but industry officials say the market remains fragile and cannot cope with capacity increases, while politician­s in Europe balk at capacity reductions.

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