EU Proposes Provisional Duties on HRC Imports from Japan, Egypt, and Vietnam – India Exempted

The European Commission proposed to set provisional anti-dumping (AD) duty rates on hot-rolled coil imports from Egypt, Vietnam and Japan, Fastmarkets learned on Friday March 14.

The anti-dumping investigation was started after the European steel association Eurofer lodged a complaint last June on behalf of European producers, alleging that HRC imports from four countries — India, Japan, Egypt and Vietnam — are being dumped and have been causing material injury to the European steel industry, Fastmarkets reported.

The pre-disclosure document, revealing proposed provisional duties for each origin, was made available on March 14. Provisional duties are set to be imposed as of April 7.

The AD probe is expected to be conducted by early October, with definitive measures to follow.

In the meantime, the highest duties were proposed for Japanese suppliers: 32% for JFE Steel Corporation and Daido Steel Co., Ltd, and 33% for Nippon Steel Corporation and all other companies — apart from Tokyo Steel, which got a relatively low duty of 6.9%.

For Egypt, the provisional duty rate for Ezz Steel and all other companies was set at 15.6%.

For Vietnam, provisional duties were set at 12.1% for Formosa Ha Tinh Steel Corporation and all other companies apart from Hoa Phat Dung Quat Steel Joint Company — no duty was proposed on its imports.

And, surprisingly, no provisional duties were suggested for Indian companies.

These four countries altogether supplied 3.9 million tonnes of HRC to the EU in 2024, accounting for 41.2% of total HRC imports to the bloc, Global Trade Tracker stats showed.

Market sources had split views on the potential market effect.

Notably, several sources suggested that safeguard caps, in combination with the duties, will limit imports to the EU, making overseas bookings increasingly risky for EU buyers.

Adjustments to steel safeguard measures were made available on Tuesday March 11.

For HRC, the cap per country over the tariff rate quota (TRQ) volume initially available in each quarter has been reduced from 15%, originally proposed in July, to 13%.

On top of that, quarterly quota allocations have also been reduced. For example, for India, which has an individual quarterly quota, the allocation for April-June 2025 was cut by 24.6%. And for “other countries” — under which Egypt, Vietnam and Japan fall — the allocation was cut by 8.4%.

“It’s like gambling these days; when you book HRC from overseas mills, you don’t know how much it’s going to cost you in the end,” one buyer said.

Other sources said that the effect will be limited for some origins because, for example, Vietnamese material “will be manageable even with a duty, just like Turkish HRC is now,” a trader in Italy said.

Fastmarkets’ weekly price assessment for steel hot-rolled coil, import, cfr main port Northern Europe was €560-580 per tonne on March 14, stable week on week.

Fastmarkets calculated its daily steel hot-rolled coil index, domestic, exw Northern Europe at €636.19 per tonne on March 14, up by €0.10 per tonne from €636.09 per tonne on March 13.

The Northern European index was up by €5.25 per tonne week on week and by €32.86 per tonne month on month.

EU proposes provisional HRC AD on three countries

The European Commission has proposed provisional anti-dumping duties on hot-rolled coil (HRC) imports on certain countries, according to letter of pre-disclosure of preliminary findings dated 14 March, seen by Kallanish.

The letter states that the summary of duties is for informational purposes only and does not prejudge the Commission’s final decision.

Interested parties are given three working days to submit comments on the pre-disclosure findings.

India proposed not to impose any duties, while Egypt could face a duty of 15.6% including producer Ezz Steel Company.

Japan’s Nippon Steel Corporation and all other companies could be subject to a 33% duty, and Daido Steel and JFE Steel Corporation are both set at 32%, while Tokyo Steel faces a lower duty of 6.9%.

Vietnam’s Formosa Ha Tinh Steel Corporation and all other companies are facing to a 12.1% duty. However, Hoa Phat Dung Quat Steel Joint Company may be exempt from the duties.

“These are proposed duties. When finally published, we will understand if Hoa Phat gets zero and if they are retroactive,” a market participant commented.

The provisional duties apply once agreed to flat-rolled products of iron, non-alloy steel, or other alloy steel, whether or not in coils, including cut-to-length and narrow strip products, not further worked than hot-rolled, not clad, plated, or coated, originating in Egypt, Japan, and Vietnam.

These products are currently classified under CN codes 7208 10 00, 7208 25 00, 7208 26 00, 7208 27 00, 7208 36 00, 7208 37 00, 7208 38 00, 7208 39 00, 7208 40 00, 7208 52 10, 7208 52 99, 7208 53 10, 7208 53 90, 7208 54 00, 7211 13 00, 7211 14 00, 7211 19 00, ex 7225 19 10 (TARIC code 7225 19 10 90), 7225 30 90, ex 7225 40 60 (TARIC code 7225 40 60 90), 7225 40 90, ex 7226 19 10 (TARIC codes 7226 19 10 91, 7226 19 10 95), 7226 91 91, and 7226 91 99.

Proposed provisional anti-dumping duties
Country Company Provisional anti- dumping duty (%)
Egypt Ezz Steel Company 15.6
Egypt All other companies 15.6
India All companies n/a
Japan Nippon Steel Corporation 33.0
Japan Tokyo Steel 6.9
Japan Daido Steel 32.0
Japan JFE Steel Corporation 32.0
Japan All other companies 33.0
Vietnam Formosa Ha Tinh Steel Corporation 12.1
Vietnam All other companies* 12.1

* It is proposed not to impose provisional anti-dumping duties on imports from Hoa Phat Dung Quat Steel Joint Company.

Elina Virchenko Turkey , Anna Low Singapore

EU Commission proposes provisional AD duties on HRC imports from Egypt, Japan, Vietnam

The European Commission said in a March 14 statement that it proposed to apply provisional antidumping duties ranging from 6.9% to 33% on its imports of flat hot-rolled coil steel products from Egypt, Japan and Vietnam.

In view of comparable dumping margins revealed by the AD investigation into the respective imports, the Commission proposes 12.1% and 15.6% duties for HRC originating, respectively, in Vietnam and Egypt.

The duties suggested for Japanese coils are significantly steeper except for Tokyo Steel, which faces 6.9%, but Daido Steel and JFE Steel Corp. are challenged with 32% and all the rest, including Nippon Steel, with 33% AD charges to be levied on their HRC sales to the EU.

HRC imports from India are part of the same investigation too, but no dumping margin has been identified so far, following the EU statement.

The proposed duties will not apply to stainless and grain-oriented silicon electrical steel, and tool and high-speed steel strip, as well as sheets in thicknesses exceeding 10mn and widths of 600mm or more.

Author: Katya Bouckley