Southeast Asia steelmakers bid to emerge from China's shadow
As a construction boom spurs steel demand across Southeast Asia,
countries such as Vietnam, Indonesia and Thailand are challenging a flood of
imports from China by retooling their steelmaking technology or imposing
tariffs.
U.S. and European
steelmakers are leading complaints over alleged dumping, but cheap Chinese
imports account for two thirds of steel consumed in many Southeast Asian
countries. The region includes six of the top 10 buyers of Chinese steel, and
capacity utilization in its own mills has slumped to less than 40 percent.
While steel from China is
expected to dominate for many years, swelling demand is driving efforts in
countries like Vietnam and Indonesia to build more modern plants to better
compete with China's vast mills.
"China is a major
force with huge supply dominating the world, but we have solutions to deal
with it," Tran Tuan Duong, general director of Vietnam's biggest steel
firm Hoa Phat Group, told Reuters.
Hoa Phat aims to triple
production capacity to up to 6 million tons over 5-10 years using modern
blast furnace technology.
The local unit of
Taiwan's Formosa Plastics Group has begun work on a $10.6 billion steel
complex in Ha Tinh province with an initial annual crude steel capacity of 7
million tonnes, although this month's planned start-up of the initial phase
has been delayed by an environmental dispute.
Trade
tensions
China has raised global
trade tensions as its steel exports have soared, with surplus capacity
estimated at more than 300 million tons, or triple Japan's annual output.
Steelmakers in Southeast
Asia have been hit hard as many of the region's electric arc furnace plants,
which use scrap as their raw material, are unable to compete with Chinese
blast furnaces using far cheaper iron ore.
Many electric arc furnace
plants have been idled and capacity utilization across the 10-member
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) grouping has fallen to less
than 40 percent from around 65 percent following a 2010 regional free trade
agreement with China that cut tariffs on a raft of goods, including steel,
said Roberto Cola, president of the ASEAN Iron and Steel Council.
A man works at Hoa Phat steel mill in Hai
Duong province, Vietnam June 14, 2016. Photo: Reuters.
Hoa Phat's Duong said
Vietnam could compete with other Southeast Asian countries.
"But the trade deal
is plus C, which means including China, and all troubles come from
that," he said.
Vietnam was the
second-biggest market for Chinese steel in 2015, with imports of 10.11
million tonnes, according to UK consultancy MEPS. Its own steel output that
year stood at just 6.1 million tons, World Steel Association data showed.
"With Southeast Asia
as a whole it's a bit of a chicken and egg situation," said MEPS analyst
Jeremy Platt. "The cheap imported steel is benefiting their economic
development, but it is hindering the ability to develop their steelmaking
sector."
Tariffs rise
Several countries are
introducing tariffs to protect local industry.
Vietnam in March imposed
temporary anti-dumping tariffs ranging from 14 percent to 23 percent on steel
imports from China and elsewhere. It slapped additional import duties of up
to 25 percent on more Chinese steel products that last until October 2019.
Thailand's commerce
ministry is working on the final draft of an anti-dumping law and expects to
propose the draft for approval by end-2016, a spokeswoman said.
The moves come as local
steelmakers hope to cash in on an expected jump in demand.
Indonesia and the
Philippines face a huge backlog in infrastructure, said the ASEAN Iron and
Steel Council's Cola, with steel consumption in ASEAN forecast to reach 80
million tons by 2018 from 70 million tons last year.
Indonesia's Krakatau
Steel is building a blast furnace with a capacity of 1.2 million tons west of
Jakarta, which it expects will be completed shortly.
Red hot molten
iron pours from a steel furnace at Hoa Phat steel mill in Hai Duong province,
Vietnam June 14, 2016. Photo: Reuters.
Vietnam's steel
consumption surged 34 percent in the first five months of 2016, and demand is
expected grow at more than 10 percent a year over the next decade as rapid
economic growth fuels infrastructure development, said Hoa Phat's Duong.
Steelmakers' share prices
have risen in anticipation. Vietnam's Hoa Phat Group has climbed 35 percent
this year, smaller rival Hoa Sen has gained 94 percent, and Krakatau Steel
has rallied 123 percent.
In Thailand, steelmakers
expect the first annual growth in demand in three years as the government
begins work on over $50 billion in infrastructure projects. Shares of Tata
Steel (Thailand) Pcl, have surged nearly 40 percent.
A unit of India's Tata
Steel Group and Thailand's largest steel producer, the firm canceled some
shipments from Thailand to India in April to supply the metal to the Thai
market.
"We have seen signs
of improving demand for steel, mainly from the government projects including
city rail and road projects," said Rajiv Mangal, chief executive of Tata
Steel's Thai unit, who sees sales rising 10 percent this year.
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Thứ Năm, 23 tháng 6, 2016
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