Posted on 05 Oct 2015
The Rs 15,000-crore seamless pipe industry in India is staring at the spectre of large scale job cuts and plant shutdowns due to dumping by China at "rock bottom" prices in the domestic market, say industry insiders.
China is facing anti-dumping and safeguard duties from countries like the US, the EU, Canada, Indonesia, Brazil and Mexico and is also saddled with a large inventory due to subdued demand back home.
This has led to China's steel seamless
pipe producers to export products to India at low prices, adversely impacting
domestic industry, market insiders said.
Seamless steel pipes -- used in oil, gas and power sector -- are sold by
domestic companies at about Rs 47,000-50,000 per tonne, while Chinese products
are being sold at about Rs 25,000-30,000 a tonne, they said.
Top firms such as Maharashtra
Seamless, Jindal Saw and Indian Seamless Metal Tubes (ISMT) are witnessing
almost no demand for their products in the domestic market due to large scale
availability of cheap products from China leading to plant shutdowns and job
losses.
So far Maharashtra Seamless has shutdown one facility and retrenched up to 800 people followed by ISMT with up to 500 jobs and Jindal Seamless with up to 300. Besides, both Jindal Saw and ISMT are running at only 15 per cent of their total capacity.
"If this situation continues for another 2-3 months, we will see as much as 8,000 direct jobs being lost and much more indirect job cuts, besides plant shutdowns. We will have no other option but to take such a step to," the Association of Seamless Pipes and Tubes Vice President S Sarkar told PTI.
The Indian seamless pipes industry
-- with a capacity of 1.5 million tonnes (MT) -- provides employment to a total
of 25,000 people of which 12,000-15,000 are directly employed.
"That apart, such a scenario also jeopardises up to Rs 8,000 worth of
loans that these companies took for capacity expansion and other works,"
he added.
Four years back, 65 per cent of
sales of Indian firms came from the domestic market, but that has gone down to
almost zero in 2014-15 fiscal. Not even a single firm got any orders from India
last year. All went to Chinese, Sarkar said.
The only order in the last fiscal came from Indian oil firms for about 150,000
tonnes of seamless pipes, which was bagged by Chinese firms. Not even a single
order went to any Indian company, he added.
"How can we compete with the
Chinese, who are selling at rock bottom prices of Rs 30,000 a tonne when our
raw material costs comes at around Rs 31,000 per tonne. It is not possible. Now
only if government steps in with Anti-dumping or Safeguard Duty the industry
would have some chance to compete," he said.
China has a capacity of about 25 MT,
of this only 10-15 MT is absorbed in the market there. So, with a stock of
about 15 MT and no other markets globally to export, India is the destination
for the producers there, he added.
A similar situation is faced by flat and long steel products. Domestic steel
makers are also battling cheap imports from China, South Korea and Japan.
The government recently imposed
anti-dumping and safeguard duty on various flat and long steel products to save
the domestic industry.
"We are urging the government to consider our situation and impose
regulatory measures to save the industry. We may not be as big as other steel
industries but a lot of investment is made here also and many people depend on
us for their livelihood," Sarkar said.
The next orders are expected to come
only by September 2016 from the domestic market and the global market is also
not very optimistic. So Indian firms have no incentive to keep producing and on
top of that, cheap imports are adversely impacting the market, Sarkar said.
Unless a high anti-dumping duty on import of seamless pipes from China is not
imposed immediately the seamless pipes mills in India are surely going to die
their deaths soon, he rued.