European steel producers association Eurofer continues to lobby the European Commission to curb scrap exports as the industry looks to decarbonise.
On 12 November, Eurofer reiterated its view that the commission "recognise steel scrap as a strategic secondary raw material under the critical Raw Material Act, ensure the robust implementation and effective enforcement of the revised EU Waste Shipment Regulation to ensure compliance with the EU environmental standards in third countries and avoid circumvention, while securing a sustainable and diversified raw materials supply by leveraging bilateral Free Trade Agreements, granting reciprocal market access and eliminating illegal export bans and other distortions."
EU scrap consumption is due to increase significantly in the coming years. "Scrap exports to third countries without comparable environmental and social standards [therefore] need to be restricted to ensure that the use of ferrous scrap generated in the EU contributes to sustainability objectives aligned with the EU ones," Eurofer said.
The EU has long been a net exporter of ferrous scrap, with outflows of the material standing just shy of 11mn t in the first eight months of this year, customs figures show. Last year the EU exported 17.67mn t of ferrous scrap, a 5pc rise on the year.
The bloc's trade has always been heavily focused on Turkey, the world's largest importer of ferrous scrap, with annual trade ranging from over half to two-thirds of total exported volumes in the past five years. Turkey, with around three-quarters of steel production based on electric arc furnace route, is heavily reliant on European-origin material.
Turkey's share of EU exports increased in recent years after the UK left the EU, but the share of shipments from the bloc started rising from the second half of the mid-2010s, when Russia, another major ferrous scrap supplier to Turkey, started restricting exports.
Russian exports of scrap to Turkey fell from around 2.5mn t in 2018, to 1.9mn t in 2019 and 2021 and to just over 400,000t in 2022-24.
The EU's major trading partners for scrap include Egypt, India and Pakistan, all of which are third countries to the EU and non-OECD countries whose import volumes have been increasing as Asia continued to grow its steelmaking capacities, mostly through the IF (induction furnace) route.
The EU's intention to restrict scrap exports has been deeply unsettling for the many developing markets' representatives, as much as its movement towards the implementation of CBAM (Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism), which will reduce the possibility of exports to the EU from countries where steelmaking processes and carbon emissions are not compliant with the EU's stricter standards.
Annual EU-27 ferrous scrap exports | metric tonnes | ||||
Country | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 |
Turkey | 11,247,281.0 | 12,676,091.0 | 10,327,403.0 | 10,088,491.0 | 6,826,876.0 |
Egypt | 1,076,930.0 | 1,810,866.0 | 1,431,831.0 | 1,570,352.0 | 1,237,722.0 |
India | 443,130.0 | 294,994.0 | 1,108,881.0 | 1,906,608.0 | 576,008.0 |
Pakistan | 853,178.0 | 727,466.0 | 700,879.0 | 731,182.0 | 371,943.0 |
Switzerland | 455,034.0 | 511,098.0 | 463,440.0 | 339,894.0 | 355,709.0 |
Norway | 314,627.0 | 294,956.0 | 396,933.0 | 451,873.0 | 309,299.0 |
Morocco | 197,803.0 | 329,901.0 | 556,417.0 | 442,498.0 | 258,630.0 |
UK | 361,741.0 | 307,281.0 | 307,173.0 | 275,125.0 | 203,786.0 |
US | 622,523.0 | 574,264.0 | 316,077.0 | 694,507.0 | 182,064.0 |
Moldova (Rep. of) | 251,184.0 | 344,609.0 | 79,788.0 | 192,964.0 | 179,579.0 |
Republic of North Macedonia | 74,951.0 | 106,400.0 | 112,176.0 | 165,404.0 | 115,626.0 |
Bangladesh | 107,611.0 | 149,570.0 | 700,108.0 | 388,936.0 | 91,410.0 |
Total | 16,371,459 | 18,542,680 | 16,843,989 | 17,674,602 | 10,822,245 |
2024 data for January to August | |||||
— Customs and Eurostat data |