Jindal Steel Angul capacity expansion reshapes India’s steel landscape

Jindal Steel Angul capacity expansion lifts India’s steel output toward 12mn t/yr, raising oversupply and CBAM-related export risks.
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Jindal Steel Angul capacity expansion reshapes India’s steel landscape
Jindal Steel

India’s latest Jindal Steel Angul capacity expansion signals a new phase in the country’s flat steel growth. The Jindal Steel Angul capacity expansion lifts the site’s output and pushes India further into a high-capacity cycle. As a result, the Jindal Steel Angul capacity expansion also raises questions about future domestic oversupply and export pressure.

Jindal Steel Angul capacity expansion lifts output toward 12mn t/yr

Jindal Steel has commissioned a new 3mn t/yr basic oxygen furnace at its Angul plant in Odisha. The BOF takes the site’s steelmaking capacity from 6mn t/yr to 9mn t/yr, with a target of 12mn t/yr in the 2025-26 fiscal year. The Jindal Steel Angul capacity expansion is anchored by a new 5mn t/yr blast furnace, started last week. Together, these assets support a broad product mix, including hot-rolled coil, galvanised steel, plate and rebar. This positions Angul as one of India’s key integrated hubs for flat and long products.

Indian steel capacity race intensifies across multiple producers

However, Jindal is not expanding alone, as rival Indian steelmakers also push new capacity. JSW Steel is enlarging its Vijayanagar facility in Karnataka, while Tata Steel brought a 5mn t/yr blast furnace online at Kalinganagar in 2024. These projects, combined with the Jindal Steel Angul capacity expansion, are driving a rapid rise in India’s crude steel potential. Domestic demand remains strong in construction, infrastructure and manufacturing, yet capacity growth is outpacing exports. Therefore, market participants are increasingly focused on how new tonnes will be absorbed if external demand falters.

CBAM and weak exports raise risk of domestic stock build-up

Meanwhile, looming changes under the EU’s carbon border adjustment mechanism are already dampening Indian steel export flows. Buyers in Europe are reassessing supply chains and potential carbon cost pass-throughs, which could limit future Indian shipments. As exports dwindle, the Jindal Steel Angul capacity expansion and parallel projects at JSW and Tata could contribute to inventory accumulation in the domestic market. A stock build-up would pressure prices and margins for Indian mills, especially in commoditised hot-rolled and rebar segments. As a result, strategic responses may include more value-added products, new export destinations and accelerated downstream integration.

The Metalnomist Commentary

India’s aggressive build-out, anchored by the Jindal Steel Angul capacity expansion, underlines its ambition to become a global steel powerhouse. Yet policy shifts such as CBAM mean that capacity alone is no longer enough; carbon cost, product mix and market access will decide who wins. For global buyers, India’s rising volumes may offer pricing opportunities, but also higher exposure to trade and climate-policy risk.

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