EU puts countermeasures on hold after US pauses 20% tariffs on EU imports

The European Union has put on hold its plans to hit the US with countermeasures to its tariffs on aluminium and steel after President Donald Trump announced on Wednesday April 9 he was pausing the highest tariffs for 90 days, with the exception of those on China.

Had they remained in force, they would have seen EU imports to the US taxed at 20%, but they will now be taxed at 10% like imports from most other trade partners.

“We took note of the announcement by President Trump. We want to give negotiations a chance,” Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement on the Commission website on Thursday. “While finalising the adoption of the EU countermeasures that saw strong support from our member states, we will put them on hold for 90 days. “

She added that the countermeasures could still be applied if negotiations are unsatisfactory.

EU member states had just voted in favor of the countermeasures – which could affect a wide range of goods worth some €20 billion ($21.9 billion) – when Trump announced the pause. According to reports, the list of goods affected was wide-ranging and included yachts, diamonds, eggs, dental floss, sausages and poultry. They indicated the EU was also considering tariffs on soybeans from December 1.

Sources close to the matter said they believed most pulp and paper products have now been removed from the list.

The 10% blanket tariff on US imports from most trade partners remains in place, and currently the US is applying a 125% tariff on China, while China has announced counter tariffs of 84%.

Published by: Sharon Levrez

European HRC prices steady; buyers expect future market developments

Prices for European steel hot-rolled coil were steady on Wednesday April 9, with buyers waiting to see how the market would develop in the short run, industry sources told Fastmarkets.

Fastmarkets calculated its daily steel hot-rolled coil index domestic, exw Northern Europe at €653.75 ($724.03) per tonne on Wednesday, down marginally by €0.63 per tonne from €654.38 per tonne the previous day.

The Northern European index was up by €2.71 per tonne week on week and by €22.37 per tonne month on month.

Mills in Northern Europe continued offering June-July delivery HRC at €670-700 per tonne ex-works, industry sources told Fastmarkets.

However, the price levels in transactions were below the targeted offers, Fastmarkets understands.

Buyers’ estimations for the tradable market level were mainly at €640-650 per tonne ex-works.

“The market is very quiet now. I do not think that levels of around €700 per tonne ex-works will be achieved. The European economy is in crisis and real consumption is still low,” a distributor source based in Germany told Fastmarkets.

The source added that the market would probably slow down due to the upcoming Easter holidays.

A distributor source from the Benelux region also confirmed that the market is comparatively calm now.

In Southern Europe, Fastmarkets’ daily steel hot-rolled coil index domestic, exw Italy was calculated at €631.25 per tonne on Wednesday, unchanged from the previous day.

The index was up by €6.25 per tonne week on week and by €11.25 per tonne month on month.

The latest domestic offers for HRC with delivery in four to five weeks were heard at €660-670 per tonne delivered, equivalent to€650-660 per tonne ex-works.

An integrated European mill was still offering June-delivery HRC in the Italian market at €680-700 per tonne delivered, Fastmarkets understands.

However, no major transactions were heard in the Italian market, with most buyers estimating the tradable market level at €620-630 per tonne ex-works.

Regarding imports, Indonesia was heard offering HRC to Italy at €550-560 per tonne CFR, but some sources reported higher offer levels from the same destination, reaching €580-585 per tonne CFR.

India offered HRC to Italy at €580-590 per tonne CFR, industry sources told Fastmarkets.

Thailand was also heard offering HRC to Italy at €580-590 per tonne CFR.

Turkey continued offering HRC to Italy at €580-590 per tonne CFR, including the anti-dumping duty.

Some transactions with Turkish HRC to Spain were reported at €600-605 per tonne CFR, including the anti-dumping duty, but these were not largely confirmed by other market sources.

Published by: Darina Kahramanova

 

Evolution of green steel premiums in Europe: flats versus longs

The rush toward steel sector decarbonization was gaining momentum across the world with attempts being made to reduce the effects of emissions on the global ecology, with Europe in the forefront, Fastmarkets heard on Wednesday April 9.

Under the European Green Deal, the European Commission has proposed a new EU goal to become a net-zero emitter by 2050.

The steel industry was responsible for around 5% of the CO2 emissions in the EU and 7% globally, according to Commission data.

But alongside the numerous challenges this has created, there were also opportunities for steelmakers to charge premiums for steel with a lower carbon footprint. The uptake of green premiums, however, has been very different in the flat steel and long steel sectors in Europe.

Fastmarkets has taken a closer look into the matter, investigating the new green steel landscape in the region.

Conventional steelmaking in Europe
Around 55% of the steel produced in Europe is created through the integrated blast furnace/basic oxygen furnace (BF-BOF) route. Carbon emissions from this production method amount to around 2.0-2.2 tonnes of CO2 (direct and indirect emissions) per tonne of steel, according to the Commission

Approximately 45% of the steel produced in Europe is made using the electric-arc furnace (EAF) route, but this share was expected to rise to around 57% when the EU shifts toward clean technologies on the way to net-zero emissions by 2050.

In Europe, 79% of carbon steel long products are produced via the EAF route, while 96% of flat products are produced using the BF-BOF route.

But the EU’s ambitious decarbonization goals and the growing cost of carbon emissions under the Emission Trading System (ETS) in the bloc have been stimulating European steelmakers to invest heavily in the decarbonization of their operations, using steelmaking methods that reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

Major suppliers were offering their own steel brands with lower carbon footprints – XCarb, Arvzero, SSAB Zero, Bluemint, Greentec, PureSteel+, Calibria, etc – but there was no common standard for green steel in the industry yet.

Most flat-steel makers use the same approach, intending to replace BF-BOF capacity with EAFs and hydrogen-fuelled direct-reduction iron (DRI) modules.

Consequently, the transition from traditional blast furnace-based steelmaking, widely used for flat steel manufacturing, to so-called “green” and less polluting routes of production has become an integral element in major European steel companies’ strategies.

Using coal-based DRI reduces CO2 emissions by 38% compared with the traditional BF-BOF route. Using a combination of natural gas and hydrogen and carbon monoxide in DRI reduces CO2 emissions by 61% compared with BF-BOF. And using only hydrogen can allow CO2 emissions to be reduced by as much as 97%.

Evolving green flat steel market
Demand for low-emission steels has been growing slowly due to the notably high premiums for such materials and the lack of regulation in the industry, which would stimulate buyers to “go green.”

Fastmarkets’ methodology defines European green flat steel as “steel produced with Scope 1, 2 & 3 emissions at a maximum of 0.8 tonne of CO2 per tonne of steel.” Under that methodology, in June 2023, Fastmarkets launched its inaugural green flat steel assessment.

Fastmarkets’ most recent weekly assessment of the green steel, domestic, flat-rolled, differential to HRC index, exw Northern Europe, was €150-200 ($166-221) per tonne on April 3, unchanged week on week.

European steelmakers have maintained their offer prices for green flat steel at €200-300 per tonne.

But despite slow demand, the room for discounts was quite limited due to the high costs of green steel production, market sources said.

“To produce green steel, we have to buy green energy, and pay for environmental declarations,” a mill source said. “What’s the point of selling [green steel] below cost?”

At the same time, the majority of flat steel production in Europe was still achieved using traditional BF-BOF methods. Major European mills were also offering reduced carbon emission solutions for flat steel products produced via the BF-BOF route with more “digestible premiums” as opposed to “fossil-free” steel produced via the EAF route.

“There are different shades of green in the market,” a mill source said . “Not everyone needs 80-90% decarbonized steel, and not everyone can afford it. For many buyers, a 30-50% reduction in emissions is enough to meet their needs.”

In January 2024, Fastmarkets launched an assessment for a reduced carbon emissions differential paid for flat steel produced in European blast furnaces, with carbon emissions of 1.4-1.8 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of steel.

Fastmarkets’ most recent assessment of the flat steel reduced carbon emissions differential, exw Northern Europe, was €40-60 per tonne on April 3, also stable week on week.

For steel produced in blast furnaces, with reduced carbon emissions of 1.4-1.8 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of steel, offers of premiums were reported at €60-70 per tonne in April, with some limited room for discounts.

Green long steel
In the long steel sector, which mainly uses the EAF route of steel production, the acceptance of premium charges by customers was comparatively more difficult because this method of production was already considered more ecologically sound.

Traditionally, steel produced in EAFs using scrap feedstock produces no more than 0.8 tonne of carbon per tonne of steel.

“Being an EAF producer is both an advantage and a disadvantage,” a producer from Southern Europe told Fastmarkets. “On one hand, we are already green, but on the other, customers do not see why they have to pay a premium for what they had previously been buying without it.”

As a result, the demand for green long steel in the region remained limited and was mainly concentrated in Northern Europe, where the culture of care about the environment is at a high level.

“If you sell green longs in Scandinavia, that is more in their culture,” a producer with mills across Europe said. “Southern Europe is different, [and] most customers are not ready to pay for low carbon emissions.”

Another producer with assets across Europe confirmed that the construction and automotive industries in Northern Europe were the key consumers of green steel in Europe at the moment.

A push from governments was another reason for better demand for green steel in Northern Europe.

“Demand for green [steel] should be stimulated through public procurement, the way it is in Nordic countries. Otherwise, it’s difficult to motivate buyers to pay a higher price,” a buyer in Germany said.

“In Scandinavia, there are many public projects requiring green steel procurement. There is an actual market for green steel,” a mill source in Europe said. “So distributors and trading companies there are more keen to buy green. They know that they can pass the costs [of green steel] down to the end-user.”

To track the development and prices of this emerging market, Fastmarkets has launched two new weekly assessments for green long steel prices, domestic, delivered Northern Europe.

Fastmarkets’ inaugural weekly price assessment for green steel, differential to steel reinforcing bar (rebar), domestic, delivered Northern Europe, was €20-30 per tonne on April 9.

And the first assessment of the green steel base price, reinforcing bar (rebar), domestic, delivered Northern Europe, inferred, was €660-710 per tonne on the same date.

The latter price was calculated by adding the weekly value for the green steel differential to steel reinforcing bar (rebar), domestic, delivered Northern Europe, to the weekly assessment of the price for steel reinforcing bar (rebar), domestic, delivered Northern Europe.

Stricter green criteria
At the same time, the criteria for green steel produced in EAFs have become stricter. According to market sources, 0.5 tonne of CO2 per tonne of steel is the new maximum level for EAF mills, but this is beyond the capabilities of many producers.

“In Poland, emissions are around 0.75-0.8 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of steel because their electricity is generated using coal,” the producer from Southern Europe said.

One of the main ways to cut emissions for EAF-based producers was to use renewable energy such as solar and wind power, or clean energy from nuclear plants or hydrogen.

During discussions with producers across Europe, Fastmarkets learned that, with the help of clean energy, EAF mills can reduce emissions to 0.2-0.4 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of steel, and ask for a $20-50 per tonne premium for that, while some mills did not charge premiums at all.

Nevertheless, if paid at all, the premiums accepted by customers were normally at the lower end of the offer range, while according to some producers they did not compensate for the investments and costs put into the production of such materials.

“Customers are not ready to pay for low emissions while investments are huge. So they are important, but not the priority. There will be demand later, but as of now the market is not ready,” a source with a group that owns production units across Europe said.

For this reason, market sources said, investment in emissions reductions by long steel producers will be realized at a much slower pace than in the flat steel sector.

 

Italian steel plate prices in limbo with insufficient demand

Steel heavy plate prices were broadly stable in Italy amid still-muted demand, but some suppliers were considering increases for the second quarter, trade sources told Fastmarkets on Wednesday April 9.

Fastmarkets’ weekly price assessment for steel domestic plate, 8-40mm, exw Southern Europe, was unchanged on Wednesday at €640-650 ($709-720) per tonne.

Tradeable prices for commodity-grade steel heavy plate in Italy have been “stuck” at €640-650 per tonne ex-works for some weeks, with market sources reporting tepid demand.

Some local re-rollers still had April production to sell, they added.

“We see mainly hand-to-mouth business these days. Business is slow,” a seller in Italy said.

For May-June rolling, some mills said that they were considering price increases by as much as €20-30 per tonne, citing higher costs of production, because no substantial improvement in demand was expected in the near future.

Some suppliers have already issued new offers at €680-700 per tonne ex-works, compared with €660-670 per tonne ex-works for March-April.

Industry sources, however, felt that such prices were too high for the spot market and were only possible for project business at the moment.

The only supportive factor for the market was limited import availability, while real demand remained slow, trade sources said.

Stronger trade measures would limit imports from third countries to the EU and support domestic prices in the longer run, they added.

Under the new safeguards that came into effect on April 1, there was a newly introduced cap per single country over the tariff rate quota (TRQ) volume initially available in each quarter, set at 20% for heavy plate.

This will affect steel plate imports falling under the “other countries” category. South Korea, Indonesia and India were the major heavy plate suppliers to the EU under that category, offering the most competitive prices, according to market participants in Europe.

“New import orders [of heavy plate] are few to Italy, that’s true. But there are sufficient stocks at ports, available at low prices and with short delivery times,” a buyer source said.

June-shipment heavy plate from Indonesia South Korea was offered to Italy at €580-590 per tonne CFR.

But market sources pointed out that, after the new safeguards were announced, South Korean suppliers limited their offers of commodity grades, focusing on premium plate deliveries for use in making wind-towers.

Published by: Julia Bolotova