India's steel industry contemplates potential fallout from Trump
administration tariffs
[March 04, 2025] By
SIBI ARASU
BENGALURU, India (AP) — Rows of small factories line the streets of a
dusty suburb in Bengaluru, where workers weld and cast Indian-made steel
into everything from car parts to kitchen sinks. Here, U.S. President
Trump’s announcement to impose high trade tariffs on steel imports has
some unexpected supporters.
Many industry workers and experts expect that the result of tariffs will
be that cheap steel gets dumped in places like India. That's because the
announced 25% tariff will make it too expensive for many companies in
countries like China and South Korea to keep exporting to the U.S.
For B. Praveen of Sun Techpro Engineering, which makes products from
steel metal sheets, it means his “wafer-thin” profit margins will
probably grow as the steel he buys gets cheaper.
“For thousands of companies like mine, this can be a good thing,” he
said. Businesses such as Praveen's employ over 200 million Indians and
are key drivers of India's economy.
But cheaper steel in India isn't good for everyone. In February Naveen
Jindal, the president of the Indian Steel Association, which represents
all India’s steelmakers, said that he was “deeply concerned,” especially
since “India is one of the few major markets without any trade
restrictions,” making it a target for potential steel dumping. And the
increased competition could impact efforts by India to produce its own
steel more cleanly. The current production of most Indian steel releases
high levels of greenhouse gas emissions, which cause climate change.
Reduction efforts could be cut in the interest of keeping profits up.

India's steel industry is big and dirty — and is set to keep growing
India is the world’s most populous nation and one of the fastest-growing
major economies. Steel demand is rising rapidly due to fast-paced
urbanization, infrastructure, and industrial growth, and the government
expects steel production to increase from 120 million tons to 300
million tons in the next five years.
Currently, up to 12% of India's greenhouse gas emissions come from
steelmaking according to the Global Energy Monitor, an organization that
tracks energy projects around the globe. It found this could likely
double in five years if more steel is produced as per the government's
plans.
Henna Khadeeja, a research analyst with GEM, explained that unlike
China, Europe, or the United States, Indian steelmakers still mostly use
coal-based blast furnaces to make steel, which are more high-emitting.
In September last year, the Indian government said it would invest $1.72
billion to help the steel industry transition to cleaner methods of
steelmaking.
[to top of second column] |

A worker welds a steel chassis at a factory in a suburb of Bengaluru,
India, Thursday, Feb. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)
 But Khadeeja said all the new steel
expansion plans that have been announced are for coal-based steel
production facilities. “Right now, the focus is mostly on producing
as much steel as possible. The strategy is mostly to retroactively
decarbonize the steel once the capacity is built in place," she
said.
Cleaning up steel is vital for India's future
Building more coal-based blast furnaces make it more difficult for
India to export its steel in the future, particularly to Europe,
said Easwaran Narassimhan of the New Delhi-based think tank
Sustainable Futures Collaborative. The European Carbon Border
Adjustment Mechanism, a tax on carbon emissions that Europe will
begin charging for all products imported to the bloc from next year,
would likely turn off any buyers from steel made with coal-based
blast furnaces.
“China’s steel production is less emissions-intensive, which means
it’s going to face a lesser impact from European carbon taxes,” said
Narassimhan. “Any amount of short-term pain today is going to be
worth in the long run."
India too has ambitious climate goals and wants to produce 500
gigawatts of clean power — enough to power nearly 300 million Indian
homes — by the end of this decade. The South Asian nation recently
crossed the milestone of installing 100 gigawatts of solar power,
most of which was installed in the last 10 years.
India also aims to go net zero — that is to stop adding
planet-warming gas to the atmosphere, either by preventing the
emissions in the first place or removing an equivalent amount
through natural or technological means — by 2070.
Indian steelmakers said they recognize the need to emit less but are
apprehensive about how much it'll cost them. “If you're not
financially viable, you cannot exist as a business,” said Prabodh
Acharya, chief sustainability officer at JSW Group, one of India's
biggest steel companies.
“Steel is essential for the growth of society and economy. We need
to find the right balance between growth, economy and
decarbonization,” he said.
___
A previous version of this report incorrectly gave the name of
Sustainable Futures Collaborative as Sustainable Futures Collective.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |