European Steel and Metals Action Plan could lift some steel prices by 30%, Acea warns

Acea warns the EU steel plan could lift specialised steel prices 30% and raise costs for manufacturers.
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European Steel and Metals Action Plan could lift some steel prices by 30%, Acea warns
ACEA

The European Steel and Metals Action Plan could raise costs for Europe’s steel-using industries. The European Steel and Metals Action Plan could push certain specialised steel grades up by 30%, Acea said. Meanwhile, industry groups expect higher costs than the Commission’s average price estimate.

Manufacturing associations argue the plan tightens import rules too sharply. They expect the proposal to nearly halve import quotas and raise out-of-quota tariffs to 50%. As a result, they estimate €5bn–9bn per year in tariff costs if import volumes stay near 2024 levels.

Import safeguards tighten supply and amplify price risk for niche grades

Quota cuts usually hit specialised categories first. Automakers and machinery makers often rely on a narrow set of approved, high-grade steels. However, only a few global suppliers produce some of these grades at scale.

The plan also adds a “melt-and-pour” origin rule. This rule forces buyers to prove where steel was melted and poured. Therefore, firms face heavier compliance work and slower procurement cycles.

Downstream manufacturers warn of a policy stack effect

The policy stack raises the total cost burden beyond tariffs. CBAM compliance and the phase-out of free ETS allowances add additional cost pressure. As a result, downstream sectors fear a competitiveness hit versus producers outside Europe.

Industry groups also flag operational complexity for smaller firms. SMEs may lack the staff to manage origin documentation and quota administration. Meanwhile, associations urge policy makers to protect trade with close partners, including Switzerland.

The Metalnomist Commentary

The European Steel and Metals Action Plan may strengthen local mills, but it can also squeeze downstream margins fast. Policymakers should target circumvention without cutting access to specialised grades. A balanced design will decide whether Europe protects industry or prices it out.

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