China shut 42.39 million tonnes of crude steel capacity in the first half of 2017, equal to 84% of its target for the whole year, a government official said at a meeting of the country’s steel industry body.
The country has essentially completed its five-year
target, set last year, to cut between 100 million and 150 million tonnes
of excess steel capacity within less than two years, said Xia Nong, an
inspector with the National Development and Reform Commission, at the
China Iron and Steel Association’s (CISA) annual meeting on Friday.
China made the pledge in January 2016 as it bid to
put an end to a price-sapping capacity glut that had left the country’s
massive steel sector mired in debt and losses.
The capacity cuts made this year do not include a
nationwide campaign to shut down illegal low-grade steel production,
believed to amount to around 100 million tonnes a year, which was
completed by the end of June.
Jin Wei, CISA’s president, said that all low-grade
producers in China had already been forced to cease operations,
according to an account of the meeting published on CISA’s official
website.
Jin also warned steel producers that despite rising
output and improving steel product prices in the first half of the year,
profits still remained relatively low and the sector was still
struggling to make a sustained recovery, especially after a steep
decline in export volumes.
Chinese steel production rose 4.6% in the first half
of this year to 419.75 million tonnes, with production reaching a record
monthly high in June, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS)
showed earlier this month.
Profits of the ferrous metal processing sector rose
1.1 times year-on-year in June, compared with 5.7% growth in May, due to
the surge in steel prices and low comparison base, NBS data showed
earlier this week.





