News Room - Steel Industry

Posted on 30 Aug 2016

As Beijing aims for blue skies, steel mills get unexpected boost

When Beijing ordered hundreds of industrial plants to close ahead of China’s first-ever G20 summit next week, the government wanted to spruce up the host city of Hangzhou and ensure world leaders would gather under clear blue skies.

In doing so, China’s leaders may have given the nation’s stricken steel mills an inadvertent leg-up, helping to restore profitability after a years-long downturn caused by weak prices as a global glut swelled and demand slowed.

Steel prices have jumped as much as 42% since late May, with the unexpected turn in fortunes all the more striking as the health of the global steel industry is set to feature on the G20 agenda amid escalating tensions over Chinese exports.

Some Chinese steel plants are turning in the best margins in at least three years following increased demand, efforts to tackle a supply glut and an evironmental crackdown, with temporary production curbs for events like the G20 accelerating the boost to profits and prices.

“Many small mills in neighbouring cities of Hangzhou have been ordered to suspend production for the world summit,” said Wu Wei, an analyst with Yong’an Futures in Hangzhou.

A survey of 32 construction-steel mills in the region by industry consultancy Mysteel found almost half have either halted or curbed output since July, cutting steel output by nearly 1 million tonnes as part of the G20 and environmental curbs.

European and US leaders have urged China to accelerate capacity cuts, blaming its big exports on slumping prices and accusing the world’s top producer of dumping its metal in foreign markets. They have threatened sanctions or anti-dumping taxes on Chinese steel imports.

China has promised to slash steel capacity by 45 million tonnes this year and cuts in the first seven months of the year amounted to 47% of the annual target, spurring Beijing to vow to quicken its pace.

While the boon from the G20 cuts will only be fleeting, Chinese steel prices have still rebounded 51% since the beginning of this year after six consecutive years of falls as a slowing economy hits demand for industrial metals.