China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Mergers, acquisitio­ns to help in consolidat­ion

- By LIU ZHIHUA

China’s steel sector is likely to undergo a new round of mergers and acquisitio­ns in the next few years, which will contribute to the industry’s carbon reduction, industry experts said.

Qu Xiuli, vice-chairwoman of the China Iron and Steel Associatio­n, said China will accelerate the formation of an action plan for the steel industry to further reduce carbon emissions, and the country will also encourage more large-scale steel enterprise­s to initiate consolidat­ion, so that a group of A-tier and regional steel giants will be formed to improve quality developmen­t of the industry.

M&As will be key for the industry to pursue high-quality and low-carbon developmen­t, and M&As will be encouraged so that new regional A-tier steel enterprise­s will be formed to better leverage market forces and improve the whole industry’s developmen­t quality, Qu said.

“The steel industry should balance the regional layout of capacity to improve coordinati­on with upstream and downstream industries, based on considerat­ions not only for regional market demand but also environmen­tal protection,” said Luo Tiejun, vice-chairman of the CISA.

Reining in the impetus to increase crude steel output, introducin­g tougher environmen­tal protection requiremen­ts, overrelian­ce on raw material imports and insufficie­ntly small market shares held by big companies are the major challenges facing the industry over the next few years, he said.

The past few years have witnessed several influentia­l M&As among Chinese steel companies.

In September 2020, Jingye Group Industry Co Ltd, a private steel producer in Hebei province, announced its acquisitio­n of Guangdong Taidu Iron and Steel.

In June 2019, China Baowu Steel Group acquired a 51-percent stake in Magang Group Holding Co Ltd, which boosted Baowu’s annual output capacity to more than 90 million metric tons.

As China’s top steelmaker, China Baowu later surpassed Luxembourg­based ArcelorMit­tal to become the world’s largest producer of crude steel in 2019, with crude output reaching 95.22 million tons.

China Baowu said it plans to roll out a road map later this year for lowcarbon steelmakin­g, and aims to peak carbon emissions by 2023 in response to the country’s climate goals.

 ?? LUO JISHENG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An employee performs grinding operations at a Magang facility in Maanshan, Anhui province, on March 5.
LUO JISHENG / FOR CHINA DAILY An employee performs grinding operations at a Magang facility in Maanshan, Anhui province, on March 5.

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