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China pauses steel capacity swap programme, which will restrict expansion

China, the world's biggest steel producer, will temporarily halt its steel capability replacement programme from Aug. 23 while working to revise the procedures, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said on Friday.

The suspension of the program, which mandates that mills should get rid of a minimum of an equal amount of older existing steelmaking capacity when they include new capability as method to suppress overcapacity in the sector, will likely limit the total growth of steel capacity in the long term.

The ministry said it will deal with the relevant celebrations to research study and modify the existing swap steps and release the revised procedures after obtaining public opinions, without providing a. specific timeline.

The ministry suspended an earlier capacity swap programme in. January 2020 before revised policies, to change the ones. issued in 2017, entered into effect in June 2021.

The capability swap suspension was required since of the new. challenges the steel market faces, the ministry stated in a. declaration.

China's big steel sector has actually been pestered by overcapacity. at the time need has fallen in part due to the fact that of the lengthy. residential or commercial property crisis.

That came in spite of steel supply having actually been on the decline. because 2021 when the nation started to top crude steel output to. limitation carbon emissions.

The short-term suspension will curb the steel capability. growth in the medium to long term; in the short term, the. capacity under construction might not be impacted much,. analysts at Horizon Insights stated in a note.

The stop will have little short term impact on the steel. market however it's anticipated to speed up the removal of zombie. capacity at the time of an industrial recession, according to. analysts in the beginning Futures, including that the revised standards. will likely be more rigid.

Analysts at Citi, however, believe this relocation would refrain from doing. enough to meaningfully phase out excess capability, as the. deteriorating demand on the ground requires more drastic steps. along with strong federal government enforcement.

(source: Reuters)