Analysis: Green-Push Dilemma—China’s Steel Curbs Could Cripple Price Control Efforts

Analysis: Green-Push Dilemma—China’s Steel Curbs Could Cripple Price Control Efforts
A woman rides a scooter past a steel plant in Anyang, Henan province, China, on Feb. 18, 2019. Thomas Peter/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

BEIJING/SINGAPORE—China is facing a high profile test of its commitment to curbing industrial pollution after steel output surged in the first half of the year to well beyond its target of capping production at 2020’s peak, sending emissions to new highs.

The Chinese regime pledged to limit crude steel output this year at no higher than the 1.065 billion tonnes it made in 2020. To meet that goal, steel producers would have to cut output by roughly 10 percent for the rest of 2021 from their record first-half pace, according to Reuters calculations based on National Bureau of Statistics data.

Yet with steel prices already near record highs amid a stimulus-led building and manufacturing boom, any forced supply cuts could fuel further raw material inflation which has sent Chinese producer prices to multi-year highs and forced a slowdown in factory activity.

Analysts say it won’t be easy for China to balance emission goals and economic targets, but it will try to ease supply shortfalls and price rises with export tariffs and higher imports.

As the world’s largest polluter contributing nearly 31 percent of global CO2 emissions, according to BP, China plays a critical role in determining if worldwide emissions reduction goals can be met.

Smoke billows from smokestacks and a coal-fired generator at a steel factory in northern China's Hebei Province, on Nov. 19, 2015. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
Smoke billows from smokestacks and a coal-fired generator at a steel factory in northern China's Hebei Province, on Nov. 19, 2015. Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

A landmark U.N. climate report published last week that said climate change is worsening due to heavy fossil fuel use has put the Chinese regime under more scrutiny.

And the steel sector, which has a relatively bigger challenge in decarbonizing due to its huge power needs, accounts for around 15 percent of China’s total greenhouse gas discharge.

China has ambitious pollution-reduction plans: capping emissions by 2030, becoming carbon neutral by 2060, and shutting outdated smokestack capacity—including in steel.

Its top steelmaker Baowu Group—also the world’s biggest—said steel output cuts are now “a political issue with no room for bargaining.”

But a bounce-back in manufacturing and construction, fired up by massive stimulus measures, cheap financing and a global consumer goods boom, since COVID-19 lockdowns were lifted last year has resulted in a surge of CO2 emissions.

Smoke billows from a large steel plant in Inner Mongolia, China, on Nov. 4, 2016. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
Smoke billows from a large steel plant in Inner Mongolia, China, on Nov. 4, 2016. Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

Whack-a-Mole Production

Among China’s 31 provinces and regions, the only reported declines in output from January through June occurred in steel hub Hebei and Tianjin as long-planned capacity cuts kicked in.

The second- and third-largest producers, Jiangsu and Shandong provinces, boosted production by 13 percent and 17 percent.

Less well-established steel producers dialed up output even more in the first half of 2021. The southern Guangxi autonomous region raised production by 88 percent to nearly 20 million tonnes—around the same as Vietnam produced in all of 2020—due to new plants.

Other provinces including Yunnan and Guangdong lifted output by double digits in the first six months, ensuring that southern China alone offset the decline in the country’s core steel hubs.

Much of this relocation of steel output away from northern China was planned as part of an air-cleaning drive by Beijing.

But the more scattered nature of steel output makes it harder for authorities to track and influence far flung operations, especially in areas where local governments are keen to drive economic expansion and demand for metal is strong.

A worker handling steel cable at a steel factory in Qingdao in China's eastern Shandong Province, China, on June 8, 2018. (AFP/Getty Images)
A worker handling steel cable at a steel factory in Qingdao in China's eastern Shandong Province, China, on June 8, 2018. AFP/Getty Images

Capacity Crackdowns

Alarmed by the rise in emissions, Beijing has vowed to strengthen oversight of compliance with output cuts and said it would correct any “campaign-style” carbon reduction efforts.

Major steelmaking regions including Hebei, Jiangsu, Shandong, and Fujian have received orders to cut output for the remainder of the year.

However, with overall consumption firm, falling output raises concerns about a potential supply crunch later in 2021.

“If production cuts are strictly enforced, there will be supply shortage in the market,” said Steve Xi, senior consultant with Wood Mackenzie, adding that export volumes will likely fall in the second half.

To ensure adequate supplies, China raised steel export tariffs twice in three months and removed export tax rebates on nearly 170 steel products.

Even so, analysts still expect a tight market.

“There is still an over 5 percent gap in steel supplies (against demand) in the second half,” according to Tang Chuanlin, analyst with CITIC Securities.

Price Pressure

With industrial firms’ profitability squeezed by high prices, Beijing unexpectedly cut bank reserve requirements last month to spur lending to manufacturers.

But with global demand set to remain robust due to easing pandemic restrictions, rigid output controls could suggest continued margin pressure on downstream users.

“Falling steel supply in H2 is very likely to happen,” said Zhuo Guiqiu, analyst with Jinrui Capital. “So, (we) expect the conflict between falling supply and recovering demand will drive steel prices to run at high levels.”

Richard Lu, senior analyst with commodities consultancy CRU, was less pessimistic about the impact of steel output cuts.

“We find no conflict between the policy and the government’s intention,” Lu said, adding that a shortage would not be extensive and the industry could see higher steel margins and a drawdown in inventories.

By Min Zhang and Gavin Maguire