“All European steel plants are at risk” of closure by 2025 if nothing is done to protect the European steel industry, ArcelorMittal France chairman Alain Le Grix de la Salle told a parliamentary hearing in Paris on Wednesday.
“The steel industry in Europe is in crisis… I cannot today make the slightest commitment… The sites, as they are, are all at risk in Europe, and therefore in France too,” declared the head of the company before the French National Assembly’s economic affairs committee, in response to an MP who asked him if he could make a commitment that no other ArcelorMittal plant would be closed in France by 2025.
“The steel industry in Europe, and therefore in France, has entered a major and serious crisis. Global overcapacity is a structural phenomenon that is here to stay. These overcapacities currently represent 550m to 600m tonnes of annual production, i.e., four to five times Europe’s production,” he told Agence France Presse. “China alone exported 100m to 120m tonnes last year. That’s the equivalent of all European consumption,” he added.
“The United States is doing everything it can to protect its industry. That leaves Europe. Steel travels. We are not against imports. We are asking that they be limited and that they not have a devastating effect on our industries, as is currently the case. We are asking for fair conditions of competition, particularly with regard to the cost of CO2,” he added. “If Europe does not decide to protect its market from unfair competition, whole swathes of our industry will disappear in the very near future. This is not doom and gloom, it is, unfortunately, pure and simple reality.”
“The list of major restructurings and closures in Europe is growing,” he warned, citing in particular the German group Thyssenkrupp, ArcelorMittal’s competitor, which plans to cut “11,000 jobs by 2030, i.e., 40% of its workforce.” ArcelorMittal suspended its decarbonisation investment plans in Europe at the end of 2024.