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India seeks to offset the EU carbon tax on steel exports by looking to the Middle East and Asia

A government source revealed that India was looking for new markets to export steel in the Middle East and Asia in order to offset the carbon tax imposed by the European Union in January.

India, which is the second largest producer of crude iron and steel in the world, exports roughly two thirds of its output to Europe. The EU's Carbon Border adjustment Mechanism has put pressure on the flow of steel into Europe.

Last week, Sandeep Poundrik, the Steel Secretary of India said that the government will have to take steps to support exports affected by Europe's Carbon Tax.

The source who was directly involved with the decision-making said, "For exports we are looking at new markets, and we are also trying to get agreements in countries in Asia and the Middle East, where there is a lot of infrastructure coming up." She declined to identify herself, as the deliberations were confidential.

The source added, "Our exports have been focused on Europe until now but we are trying to diversify."

The Indian federal Ministry of Steel has not responded to an email seeking a comment.

A senior executive from a major steel company said that mills were looking for government assistance to help them compete on non-EU markets, where China was dominant.

Since 2023, steel exports from China have been resilient and reached a record high monthly in December. Beijing will introduce a licensing system to regulate the export of alloys this year, after strong shipments fueled a global protectionist backlash.

Securing raw materials

Source: India is increasing its efforts to secure raw materials like coking coal, limestone, manganese, and other essential minerals. New Delhi is also pursuing long-term agreements for offtake and asset acquisitions.

Source: The State-run Steel Authority of India and miner NMDC are interested in Brazil, Argentina, Australia, and the Middle East.

SAIL and NMDC have not responded to requests for comment.

The source stated that "for coking coal asset acquisition we are looking at Australia."

Australia supplies more than half of the coking coal required by this sector.

Last year, NMDC announced that it was exploring coal assets in Indonesia. Reporting by NehaArora. (Editing by Mayank Bhardwaj and Mark Potter.

(source: Reuters)