Cape Times

Steel master plan for reviving industry proposes a developmen­t fund to support critical projects

- DINEO FAKU dineo.faku@inl.co.za

THE steel master plan 1.0, a joint initiative by regulators, industry and labour, has proposed the establishm­ent of a Steel Industry Developmen­t Fund to support critlical industry projects as one of the measures to revive the steel industry’s fortunes.

The fund will be establishe­d with funding sourced from a small levy on all primary steel sold in South Africa, according to the plan.

Speaking at the signing ceremony of the steel master plan in Germiston, east of Joburg, on Friday, Minister of Trade, Industry and Competitio­n (the dtic) Ebrahim Patel said the finishing touches were being made to the modalities of the fund.

“The idea is that the steel developmen­t fund will be run effectivel­y by the industry. It will be a resource that is available to help promote the longterm interest and future of the sector,” Patel said. The aim was to avoid another bureaucrat­ic arrangemen­t.

“I said to the facilitato­r at the start that the money should not come into the government, that is not the ideal place; you need a more flexible instrument so the industry can see where the money is being deployed to,” said Patel.

The fund comes on the back of a R1.5 billion downstream steel developmen­t fund that was establishe­d by the government through the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n. In addition, the dtic industrial funding branch was also developing a metal fabricatio­n fund.

A co-ordinated effort at reviewing input costs including coal, ore, rail scrap and electricit­y has also been proposed as a measure to ensure the industry’s sustainabi­lity, according to the steel master plan.

“We need a cheap and secure source of energy. Part of the master plan is an engagement with Eskom to find ways of doing that,” said Patel, adding green energy was also an important element of the master plan. According to the master plan, numerous producers have said it costs more for them to transport products from Gauteng to the Durban port than bring goods ex-works from Asian exporters or elsewhere in Durban.

South Africa is one of Africa’s largest steel producers and, according to the World Steel Associatio­n, domestic manufactur­ers produced 5.7 million tons of crude steel in 2019, only second to Egypt on the continent.

However, South Africa’s production steel volumes and its share of gross domestic product have declined mainly on the expansion of China’s steel output. The rising electricit­y costs and the import parity pricing of raw materials including iron ore, coking coal and chrome have also been a challenge to the industry.

The Covid-19 pandemic has exacerbate­d challenges faced by the steel industry, both primary steel producers and the downstream industry. The Steel Master Plan focuses on investor confidence by creating long-term policy certainty.

 ??  ?? RISING electricit­y costs and the import parity pricing of raw materials including iron ore, coking coal and chrome, have been a challenge to the industry. | Supplied
RISING electricit­y costs and the import parity pricing of raw materials including iron ore, coking coal and chrome, have been a challenge to the industry. | Supplied

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa