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EU Steel Body says that imports curb the spare sector from the cliff edge

The European steel association Eurofer stated on Tuesday that EU measures to halve the amount of tariff-free imports to the bloc would save the industry from a "cliff?edge?moment". This should allow the production to be resumed at idle plants.

The EU institutions came to a preliminary agreement late on Monday, which limits tariff-free imports at 18,3 million metric tonnes, a reduction of 47% compared to 2024. They also double the duty for imports that exceed the quota.

The measures that lifted shares from ArcelorMittal Thyssenkrupp Salzgitter will replace existing safeguards which under World Trade Organization regulations?must end after eight years on June 30.

Eurofer reported that steel imports to the EU had reached a "record" 9.9 million tonnes in the last quarter of 2025. Flat steel products accounted for a third of the EU market. This highlights the need for stricter restrictions.

The rise in steel prices was attributed by the steel association to President Donald Trump’s tariffs of 50% on steel and the EU’s carbon border tax that will be implemented in 2026.

Eurofer stated that the?measures which are still awaiting final approval will help to bring back around 15 million tons of EU Steel-making Production and maintain about 30,000 direct European jobs. EU producers are only operating at 65% of their capacity.

The association welcomed the fact that new measures will be reviewed regularly, and could result in the addition of other steel products?or adjustments depending on the market's development.

"The quotas will be adjusted to the steel demand." This is something we have missed in the steel safeguards over the past eight years," said Sara Franzone. Senior manager of international trading at Eurofer.

She also said that, depending on the market conditions, the European Commission would assess whether or not unused quotas can be carried over from one quarter to another, which could lead to a spike in imports at the end of the year.

German union IG Metall stated that 'while import curbs are the right response to Asian imports at low prices and can help protect employment, trade policy alone cannot guarantee the survival of Europe’s steel sector.

Juergen Kerner said that governments must also ensure lower energy costs and help boost demand by better incentives for investment and economic stimuli. (Reporting and editing by Jan Harvey, Louise Heavens and Jan Harvey; Additional reporting by Christoph Steitz)

(source: Reuters)