The non-availability of these items in good quality and quantity hinders the growth of the steel industry, CII said.
CII argued that availability of anthracite coal, the basic customs import duty on which is 2.5 percent, is falling which might force steel industry to become dependent on imports.
CII has also suggested cutting import duty on metallurgical coke to 2.5 percent from 5 percent now.
“Low ash metallurgical coke, HS Code 2704, is a key raw material in steel accounting for almost 46 percent of the total raw material cost. Reduction in duty will help the domestic steel industry to be cost-competitive,” it said.
The industry body has also suggested removing 2.5 percent import duty on coking coal reasoning that domestic supply of coking coal being insufficient, most of it has to be imported.
“The reduction will also help to rationalise the duty structure on met coke, which is the end product of coking coal,” it added.
CII also sought greater availability of graphite electrode, a major consumable for steel sector by abolishing import duty of 7.5 percent.
With 60 percent of domestic production being exported, domestic steelmakers are forced to import. “High duty merely increases the cost burden,” CII said.
Indian Steel Association demands iron ore export ban
Indian Steel Association has written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, explaining that the metal price hike was due to surging raw material costs, and demanded a ban on iron ore export for six months.
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Steel's Net Zero mission
The country’s commitment to achieving Net Zero within a targeted timeframe will now propel its steel sector towards a sustainable future in line with global trends.
Fuel Price Hike, Supply Chain Disruption Hurt Festive Sales
Supply chain disruptions and fuel price hikes have hurt festive sales in a big way as most auto majors posted decline in sales in October.
Seaborne coking coal offers remain range-bound
Seaborne coking coal offers moved in a narrow range in October amid global supply tightness and healthy spot demand.
Global crude steel output down 8% in September
China manufactured 74 mt in September, fall of 21% y-o-y while India’s production went up by 7% to 10 mt.
MOIL embarks on expansion projects
“Even though our country is blessed with manganese ore reserves, we import 50% of the domestic requirement. We have to lower our import dependence and save precious foreign exchange.” Ram Chandra Prasad Singh, Steel Minister
Iron ore handled by major ports down 17% in H1
The 12 major Indian ports handled 27 mt of iron-ore during H1 of 2021, down by 17% from 33 mt recorded for the corresponding period of previous year.
Shrinking China output to boost India exports
“In the third quarter of 2021, the company actively responded to the pressure from external policies, such as production curtailment and dual control system on energy consumption and intensity, as well as coal resource shortage and surging prices.” Baoshan Iron and Steel Co Ltd
Indian Railways' iron-ore handling up 25% in H1
Indian Railways in April-September of 2021 (H1) transported 84 mt of iron ore, up by 25% over 67 mt during April-September 2020.
September crude steel production up 7.2% y-o-y
India’s crude steel production in September 2021 grew 7.2 percent to 9.547 million tons (mt) over September 2020 but was down by 3.2 percent from August 2021 output, provisional steel ministry data showed.
“Five enablers: way forward to sustainable cleaner steel”
Right and scalable technology, appropriate policy guidance by government, access to finance to fund transition, willingness of customers to pay for cleaner products and infrastructure for use of new technologies are the need of the hour for the sustainable and cleaner steel industry, according to Madhulika Sharma, Chief Corporate Sustainability, Tata Steel.