Posted on 29 Oct 2015
Japanese ferrous scrap exporters increase focus on India
Japanese ferrous scrap exporters are expanding their focus on the
growing Indian steel market as they seek to maintain sales despite
falling demand from their traditional Asian markets.
Bureau of
International Recycling Board Member Hisatoshi Kojo told Platts on
Tuesday that currently Japan is selling bulk cargoes to India ranging
from 10,000 mt to 15,000 mt.
"We are now aiming for India," Kojo
said on the sidelines of the BIR Round-Table Sessions in Prague. "We
have to find a new home. Right now they are evaluating our scrap
quality." Japanese scrap exporters have been exploring alternative homes
for their material due to declining demand from Taiwan and South Korea,
which have reduced their scrap purchases in favor of Chinese billet.
Average freight from Japan to Taiwan or South Korea is about $20-$25/mt, according to Kojo while freight to India is $40-$45/mt.
In the first six months of 2015, Japan exported 4.14 million mt of scrap.
The
top destinations were South Korea (1.6 million mt), China (1.04 million
mt), Vietnam (700,000 mt) and Taiwan (677,000 mt). Japan is the world's
second largest scrap exporter behind the US.
"We have seen them
do this over the years from Japan," said one scrap exporter who sells
material into India. "Right now India is so price-sensitive so if the
price is right, they will buy. Typically when bulk is sold to India it
is bought by groups of mills, not just one."
Kojo said Turkey is
not currently a viable market for Japanese scrap because cargoes would
have to be 20,000-25,000 mt to make best use of the expensive freight.
India has re-emerged as a top destination for scrap.
In
the first six months of 2015, India imported 3.17 million mt, second
most in the world behind Turkey and a 29.9% year-on-year increase from
first half 2014.
India is on the verge of surpassing the US to become the third-largest steel producer behind China and Japan.
India
produced 67.6 million mt of steel through the first nine months of
2015, and a total of 87.3 million mt in 2014, according to worldsteel
data. In 2014, the US produced 88.2 million mt.
Asked if India
would become the next China, Sunil Barthwal, Ministry of Steel for the
Government of India, said: "This is the question which the whole world
is asking."
Based on economic growth projections, Barthwal said
annual Indian steel production could reach 300 million mt in the near
future. Chinese steel production topped 800 million mt last year.
"We are not close to China and we do not want to become that close to China," Barthwal said.