Seven key things Fastmarkets learned during Irepas Fall 2024 meeting

Increased steel exports out of China, and the effects of this on the global steel and raw materials markets, were among the key topics discussed during the 91st meeting of the International Rebar Producers & Exporters Association (Irepas), along with weak demand in most regions and the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM).

More than 490 delegates from around the world gathered in Paris on September 15-17 to network and to participate in this key event for long steel producers.

Here are the seven main topics that were discussed at the conference:

Chinese dominance
China’s dominance in the international steel market has strengthened over the past year amid a drop in domestic demand and insufficient production cuts, and it was highly likely to continue in 2025.

Yeoh Wee Jin, secretary general of the South East Asia Iron & Steel Institute (SEAISI), described this year’s events in China as “a third tsunami” during a panel at the Irepas event. He expected the country’s steel exports to exceed 100 million tonnes this year, compared with 89 million tonnes in 2023.

Fall in iron ore prices
The decrease in steel production in China resulted in a fall in iron ore prices, as well as the accumulation of a significant stock of iron ore. Wilhelm Alff, chairman of the Irepas traders’ committee, said that iron ore stocks at Chinese ports currently totaled 149 million tonnes.

Fastmarkets’ daily index for iron ore 62% Fe fines, cfr Qingdao, has averaged $91.87 per tonne so far in September, compared with an average of $135.03 per tonne in January this year.

Meanwhile, scrap collection in Europe and the US has slowed down, Jens Björkman, the chairman of the raw material suppliers’ committee, said. This helped to support prices for the product despite delayed demand in Turkey.

The Middle Eastern country has switched to purchases of Chinese steel billet since the summer, when prices for the material became low enough to make production of rebar from billet more attractive than from scrap.

Fastmarkets’ daily index for steel scrap, HMS 1&2 (80:20 mix), North Europe origin, cfr Turkey, has averaged $363.36 per tonne so far in September, compared with $414.12 per tonne in January 2024.

Consequently, iron ore prices fell by almost 32% in the period under consideration, while those for scrap fell by 12.23%, making the blast furnace steel production route more profitable.

“Everybody wants to be a blast furnace-based steel producer for the next six months,” Alff said.

Shift in Turkey
Chinese steel prices remained attractive, including those for billet, so it was highly likely that Turkey would continue to meet its needs through billet imports, which would result in lower steel output in the country.

This situation could also exert pressure on scrap prices.

Trade defense
Turkey itself was limited in its long steel export opportunities at the moment, considering the imposition of trade defense measures in the US and in Canada, the almost-complete take-up of import quotas in the EU for the third quarter of 2024, with tonnages already sold for delivery in the fourth quarter, and with recent restrictions on the supply of steel products to Israel.

Some countries that formerly procured long steel from Turkey – such as Egypt, Algeria and states in the Gulf region – have become exporters themselves, according to the chairman of the Irepas producers’ committee, Murat Cebecioglu.

Yemen, plus a few other countries in the Middle East, and Latin America were currently the key destinations for Turkish long steel exports, he added.

Regional differences
Looking at the EU, Cebecioglu said that business has seemed to be at a standstill in the region for more than a year, and little or no improvement was expected in the next six months or so, a point on which other delegates at the event agreed.

Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) countries were currently in a slightly better position than those in other regions because their economies were moving in the right direction.

New projects in Saudi Arabia, for example, were creating demand in the region, with the construction and real estate sectors being the driving forces.

Yeoh said that ASEAN economies were also growing, albeit more slowly because of the generally unfavorable situation globally. He said that the construction sector was booming across the region, except in Thailand. Meanwhile, manufacturing was weakening, mainly due to soft external demand.

Earlier this year, he said that ASEAN steel demand was expected to reach 76.5 million tonnes in 2024, up from 73.5 million tonnes in 2023.

Overcapacity in Asia
Meanwhile, unsustainable overcapacity and de-greening were in prospect in Southeast Asia, with at least 104.4 million tonnes per year of new capacities expected to come onstream by 2030. These would push the region’s total capacity to 181.5 million tpy if they were all implemented, Yeoh said.

Around 83.6 million tpy of new capacity would be based on blast furnace-basic oxygen furnace technology, Yeoh said, while only 20.8 million tpy would be based on direct reduced iron (DRI) and electric-arc furnace (EAF) capacities, and this would lead to an “explosion” of greenhouse gas emissions by the region.

Decarbonization
At the same time, Europe’s imposition of its CBAM regulations and the global trend for decarbonization were other major topics at the Irepas event.

Since its start in October 2023, buyers of goods originating outside the EU must purchase certificates corresponding to the total volume of greenhouse gas emissions created by the production of the goods.

The costs of these certificates are calculated by the European Commission on a weekly basis, related to the average price of the closing EU Emission Trading System (ETS) carbon dioxide (CO2) allowance for each week.

By placing a fair price on the carbon emitted during the production of all carbon-intensive products entering Europe, European mills that currently must pay for carbon credits equivalent to their carbon emissions will be put on a more equitable basis with producers that operate in exporter countries that do not impose similar taxes.

Opinions were divided on the effects of the CBAM rules on the European market – and beyond it. Many delegates to the Irepas event felt that CBAM could help European mills to remain competitive when faced with economic challenges. Some sources, however, did not think that CBAM would either encourage global decarbonization or significantly rebalance global markets.

CBAM has put a cost on carbon, but it was not enough to counter the other factors which have resulted in a lack of balance in the global markets, these sources said.

These factors included foreign country subsidies, lower gas and electricity costs, lower labor costs, and fewer or no regulations in the construction sector, the sources added.

Global overcapacity was also expected to slow the decarbonization transition and to hamper innovation, Luciano Giua, economic and policy analyst at the Organisation for Economic Cooperation & Development (OECD), said during the event.

Published by: Vlada NovokreshchenovaIndia-Inés Levy

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