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Japan's April crude-steel output drops 6.4% due to weak construction demand

Japan's April crude-steel output drops 6.4% due to weak construction demand

The world's third-largest producer of crude steel, Japan, saw its output fall 6.4% from April 2012 to April 2013, due in part to a weakening construction market and a drop in exports.

Shipments that are robust

From top Chinese producer.

The Japan Iron and Steel Federation reported that the output, which was not adjusted for season, fell to 6.6 millions metric tons after a slight increase the month before. The production also fell 8.4% from the previous month.

Steel demand was sluggish because of delays in construction due to labor shortages and material costs. Meanwhile, the slumping overseas market, driven by China’s massive steel exports hurt overseas shipments, according to an analyst with the federation.

The analyst added that it is too early to determine the impact of U.S. Tariffs.

Nippon Steel closed a blast-furnace at its Kashima Plant, near Tokyo, late in March. JFE Steel (a division of JFE Holdings) plans to temporarily stop one of its furnaces in western Japan by mid-May.

Tadashi Imai is the president of the Federation.

You can also read about the warnings below.

In March, U.S. steel and automobile tariffs could reduce Japan’s annual crude steel production by several millions tons to below 80,000,000 tons. (Reporting and editing by Louise Heavens, Yuka Obayashi)

(source: Reuters)