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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query CISA. Sort by date Show all posts

China’s Carbon Neutrality Push Expected to Reduce Demand for Raw Materials

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China recently unveiled a "Special Action Plan for Carbon Reduction" aimed at enhancing carbon neutrality, energy efficiency, and reducing emissions. This initiative is anticipated to shift the steel industry towards electric arc furnace (EAF) production, thereby decreasing the demand for iron ore and coal.

The plan, announced by the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), emphasizes upgrading existing equipment and increasing the use of EAFs to significantly reduce the consumption of raw materials and emissions by 2030.

Although the immediate impact of this policy may be limited, market participants foresee a long-term negative effect on the demand for iron ore and coal. In June, the NDRC outlined specific goals to reduce energy consumption and emissions in the steel industry by the end of 2030. These include reducing per-ton energy consumption for blast furnace and converter processes by more than 1% from 2023 levels by 2025, and reducing energy consumption per ton of steel production by over 2% from 2023 levels, along with increasing the use of waste heat and pressure by at least 3%.

To achieve these objectives, the NDRC and related agencies plan to encourage the increased use of EAFs and accelerate upgrades of energy-intensive equipment. Industry insiders predict that while the visible impact may be minimal in 2024, the long-term demand for iron ore and coking coal will decline.

A representative from a steel company in northern China noted that the short-term impact on coking coal demand might be minor, but the long-term demand is likely to decrease. Similarly, a raw material supplier in Shanxi Province pointed out that the demand for iron ore and coking coal will diminish as EAF production replaces some blast furnace output.

In light of these policies, the proportion of EAF production is expected to rise, and the Chinese government and steel industry are likely to push for increased self-sufficiency in iron ore. According to the China Iron and Steel Association (CISA), Chinese mining companies plan to increase domestic iron ore concentrate production by 5-10 million tons in 2024 compared to 2023. CISA projects that domestic iron ore concentrate production will reach 370 million tons annually by 2025, aided by new iron ore projects.

Mysteel estimates that by 2025, total iron ore production from Chinese companies' overseas holdings will exceed 70 million tons per year, a more than 60% increase from 2020. As a result, with overall iron ore demand declining, iron ore production expansion projects are expected to continue, gradually reducing dependence on iron ore imports from this year onwards.

China’s HBIS Raises October Manganese Alloy Tender Prices Amid Rising Steel Demand and Production Costs

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HBIS

Hebei Iron and Steel (HBIS), one of China’s largest state-owned steel producers, has increased its October tender prices for manganese alloys, responding to higher steel output and rising production costs. The price hike reflects intensified demand for steel and growing costs of alloy feedstock.

HBIS’s initial October tender price for 12,000 tonnes of silico-manganese (65/17 grade) is set at 6,200 yuan per tonne (approximately $871/t) for delivery and acceptance bill payment, marking a 220 yuan/t increase from September. HBIS has also raised its purchase volume by 1,500 tonnes compared to the previous month. Industry negotiations with long-term alloy suppliers are ongoing.

Several alloy producers anticipate further price increases, projecting the silico-manganese bulk alloy price could reach 6,300 yuan/t as production costs have surged to 6,100-6,200 yuan/t due to more expensive ore feedstock.

Additionally, HBIS raised its October tender price for high-carbon ferro-manganese (65% grade) by 200 yuan/t to 5,900 yuan/t, with a purchase volume of 7,297 tonnes, up by 147 tonnes from September.

The surge in steel prices and demand—fueled by seaborne buyers—has led many mills to boost production since September, further supporting an uptrend in alloy feedstock prices. Data from the China Iron and Steel Association (CISA) show that crude steel output from member mills rose by 1.3% in late September, averaging 2.01 million tonnes per day between 21-30 September. CISA’s data encompasses over 100 of China’s largest steel mills.

Steel prices soared at the end of September, boosted by the Chinese government’s economic stimulus measures, including interest rate cuts and a lowered reserve requirement ratio for banks. China’s steel exports also climbed significantly, rising 26% year-on-year to 10.15 million tonnes in September, driven by strong overseas demand and favorable export prices.

Recent assessments show the 65/17 silico-manganese alloy grade priced higher by 200 yuan/t, reaching 5,800-5,900 yuan/t ex-works as of mid-October. Despite spot deals at these elevated prices, some alloy producers offered between 6,000-6,200 yuan/t ex-works. Meanwhile, the high-carbon ferro-manganese 65% grade held steady at 6,500-6,700 yuan/t ex-works, though many buyers were reluctant to engage in spot purchases at these levels.