Posted on 06 Nov 2015
POSCO Chief calls for China to cut steel supplies
POSCO Chairman Kwon Oh-joon lamented the global steel industry’s
overwhelming supply in his first interview with a local business daily
Thursday.
Kwon said the oversupply, fueled mainly by ramped-up
production from China, is turning the markets lopsided. With that in
mind, the chairman called for China to cut its steel supply by at least
30 percent.
Between 2005 and 2014, China’s steel production
doubled to 820 million tons from 350 million tons. Global production
also rose, but until last year the situation had not been too dire as
China consumed up to 90 percent of the supplies.
But a recent
slowdown in the Chinese economy has been distorting the supply and
demand curve, as the world‘s second-largest economy is incapable of
consuming as much steel as before.
Addressing such problems, Kwon said the Korean steelmaker would refrain from building more furnaces.
It
seemed like his comments were aimed at not just POSCO, but at other
steelmakers in Korea, industry watchers said, asking for their
cooperation in not erecting more furnaces.
Kwon also said that POSCO won’t be acquiring faltering Dongbu Steel, which recently appeared on the selling block.
The
chairman has driven reform measures to revive the steelmaker, which was
hit by a plethora of misfortunes including executive-level corruption
and the ongoing global oversupply, since he took the helm last March.