Saturday, Apr. 25, 2009
Steel Wars: Europe and the U.S. Accuse China of
Dumping<http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,1893784,00.html> By
Leo Cendrowicz / Brussels

Are Europe and the U.S. headed for a steel war with China? Brussels and
Washington have long complained that China unfairly helps its steelmakers.
Now the recession — and the different way steel firms are responding to it —
is adding to the angst.

In February the alliance of European steel manufacturers, Eurofer, accused
China of systematically distorting steel markets through subsidies. The
result, say Europe's steelmakers, has been "irrational capacity extension."
The European Commission has slapped duties on Chinese steel-pipe imports,
and is now threatening World Trade Organization action as well.

On April 8, the U.S. steel industry filed an antidumping suit with American
authorities against Beijing, alleging that $2.7 billion of pipe steel was
unfairly dumped onto the American market last year. Eurofer General Director
Gordon Moffat calls it a "perfect storm" for a trade war. "Demand has fallen
off a cliff since October," Moffat says. "We know China is simply waiting
for demand to return before flooding the markets."

Steelmakers around the world have indeed been hit by falling demand from
automakers, shipbuilders, construction and heavy-engineering sectors. Tight
credit and the need to generate cash flows have resulted in a massive drop
in steel inventories industry-wide.

But where European and U.S. steel mills are cutting back on production,
China seems to be expanding. Luxemburg-based ArcelorMittal, the world's
biggest steelmaker, is slashing output by half, for instance. Yet
state-supported Chinese steel companies are actually ramping up both
capacity and output, according to Chinese government figures. The China Iron
and Steel Association says that the production of crude steel has risen
since December, from 1.2 million tons a day to 1.4 million. (China's annual
excess production capacity is already about 100 million tons, more than the
annual U.S. steel output.)

China's steelmakers employ some 2.5 million people, and Beijing is desperate
to keep those jobs going. But U.S. and European rivals say China isn't
playing fair and accuse Beijing of subsidizing steel companies, offering
preferential tax rates, giving access to low-priced materials, and exempting
steel firms from labor and environmental rules.

European and U.S. steelmakers say those policies have artificially depressed
steel prices and helped boost China's share of total E.U. steel imports from
2% in 2003 to 30% today and its share of U.S. imports from 4% in 2003 to 19%
today. "The Chinese are in trouble and they must decide between allowing
growth rates to fall — something that is politically very difficult — or
annoying their trading partners by dumping their exports," says Paul Scott,
managing consultant at London-based mining analysts CRU. "They are likely to
choose the lesser of two evils, exporting their way out of the problem, and
this could trigger a trade war."

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