China clamps down on
excess steel as Japan decries Trump 'protectionism'
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[April 24, 2017]
MANILA/BEIJING
(Reuters) - Twenty-nine Chinese steel firms have had their licenses
revoked as Beijing kept up its campaign to tackle overcapacity in the
sector and days after U.S. President Donald Trump said he would open a
probe into cheap steel exports from China and elsewhere.
Analysts say the revocations were unlikely to be a direct response to
Trump's plan, but rather a part of China's reform measures aimed at
reducing surplus steel capacity that many estimate at around 300 million
tonnes, about three times Japan's annual output.
The official China Daily said Washington's move to investigate steel
imports could trigger a trade dispute between the United States and its
trading partners. In Japan, the world's second-biggest steel producer
after China, the head of its steelmakers' group expressed concern over
Trump's protectionist policy.
"We are greatly concerned over Trump's protectionism, although we hear
he has softened his tone on some issues with a grasp of reality," Japan
Iron and Steel Federation chairman Kosei Shindo told a news conference
on Monday.
China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology released a list
on Monday of 29 firms that will be removed from its official register of
steel enterprises. Most have already stopped producing steel, but some
had illegally expanded production or violated state closure orders.
"It's all enveloped in this strategy to improve the financial condition
of the industry which has been weighed down by excess capacity for some
time, partly as a result of inefficient operations," said Daniel Hynes,
commodity strategist at ANZ.
China is aiming to shed between 100 million to 150 million tonnes of
excess capacity over the 2016-2020 period. It also plans to shut around
100 million tonnes of low-grade steel production by the end of June.
On Monday, another 40 steel firms have been asked to make changes in
areas such as environmental protection and safety.
The majority of the companies were accused of failing to comply with
emergency output restrictions during heavy pollution periods, and they
must fully "rectify" their violations within a prescribed period, the
industry ministry said, without giving a specific time frame.
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An employee walks past columns of steel as she works at a steel
production factory in Wuhan, Hubei province, August 2, 2012.
REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
Hynes
said China may take a more gradual approach in shutting inefficient mills rather
than force "a lot of closures at once" and cause a spike in steel prices, which
is what happened in the third quarter last year.
China set up an official steel firm register in 2009 to impose order on the
poorly regulated industry and to help companies during price negotiations with
iron ore suppliers overseas.
The register was also supposed to identify the mergers and closures required to
meet a target to put 60 percent of China's steel capacity in the hands of its 10
biggest producers by the end of 2015.
However, industry consolidation rates actually fell to 34.2 percent over the
2011-2015 period, from 48.6 percent in the previous five-year period, and China
has now pushed back the 60 percent target until 2025.
According to figures published by the official China Metallurgical News earlier
this month, 292 out of a total of 635 firms in 12 provinces and cities have
already ceased production or shut down completely.
(Reporting by Manolo Serapio Jr in Manila and Beijing Monitoring Desk; Editing
by Tom Hogue and Christian Schmollinger)
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