Steel sector may be saddled with up to $70 billion stranded assets - 
		report
						
		 
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		 [June 29, 2021]  By 
		Eric Onstad 
		 
		LONDON (Reuters) - The global steel 
		industry may have to write down up to $70 billion in assets in the 
		coming years because it is still building new blast furnaces using coal 
		that will become obsolete as the world cuts carbon emissions, a report 
		said on Tuesday. 
		 
		Some 50 million tonnes of steelmaking capacity is under development 
		using blast furnace technology, largely in top producer China, 
		U.S.-based think-tank Global Energy Monitor (GEM) said in the report. 
		 
		"Building new coal blast furnaces is a bad bet for steel producers and a 
		bad bet for the planet," said Christine Shearer, GEM's coal programme 
		director. 
		 
		Blast furnaces using coal could become unnecessary or inoperable, 
		resulting in "stranded assets" worth $47 billion to $70 billion, the 
		report said. 
		 
		"Based on projections from the IEA and other groups, (they could become 
		stranded) quite likely by 2030-2040. It could be sooner if more 
		aggressive carbon taxes/restrictions are applied," said Caitlin Swalec, 
		lead author of the report. 
		 
		Total direct emissions from the global iron and steel sector must fall 
		by more than 50% by 2050 relative to 2019 to meet goals of the Paris 
		Agreement on climate change, according to the International Energy 
		Agency (IEA). 
						
		  
						
		
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			A worker walks past steel rolls at the Chongqing Iron and Steel 
			plant in Changshou, Chongqing, China August 6, 2018. REUTERS/Damir 
			Sagolj 
            
			
			  
New plants are being built even though there is large swathes of excess global 
steelmaking capacity, which was 25% above production levels in 2019, GEM said. 
Much of the global steel industry acknowledges it will have to slash carbon 
emissions since the sector accounts for about 7% of greenhouse gas emissions, 
the group said. 
 
Steel making companies and countries have made commitments to move to net-zero 
and low carbon emissions that cover more than three-quarters of current global 
steel capacity, it added. 
 
Steelmakers are looking to expand the use of electric arc furnaces while also 
developing hydrogen and carbon capture technologies to cut emissions. 
 
GEM used data from its Global Steel Plant Tracker, which surveys every plant 
operating at a capacity of one million tonnes a year or more. 
 
(Reporting by Eric Onstad; editing by David Evans) 
				 
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