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Source: India will impose a temporary 12% tariff on steel imports to limit cheap Chinese imports

Source: India will impose a temporary 12% tariff on steel imports to limit cheap Chinese imports

A government source who is directly involved in the matter said that India will impose a temporary duty of 12%, locally known as safeguard duty, on imports of steel to curb an influx of cheap imports coming from China and other countries.

Source who didn't want to be identified said on Monday that the government would implement the tax as quickly as possible.

India, which is the world's 2nd largest crude steel producer, also became a net steel importer for the second year running in fiscal 2024/25, with shipments hitting a 9-year-high of 9.5 millions metric tons.

As part of its efforts to curb cheap imports, the Directorate General of Trade Remedies, which is under the Federal Trade Ministry, recommended a 12% tariff on certain steel products.

This recommendation was made after an investigation in December of last year to determine whether or not unbridled steel imports had harmed India’s domestic industry.

The source stated that "it is clear that the duty will be 12%, and a decision should be made at the earliest," referring to the plan previously unknown of going ahead with the DGTR recommendation.

The Ministry of Finance which makes the final decision did not respond immediately to an email seeking comment.

India's finished-steel imports from China and South Korea, as well as Japan, reached a new record in the first ten months of the fiscal year ending in March.

India imported 78% of its total finished steel from China, South Korea, and Japan.

India's smaller steel mills have been forced to reduce their operations and even consider job cuts due to the influx of cheap, imported steel.

India has joined a growing number of countries that are considering taking action to curb imports.

Steel Authority of India, ArcelorMittal Nippon Steel India, and JSW Steel, India's largest steelmakers, have all expressed concern over imports. (Reporting and editing by Mayank Bhhardwaj, Andrew Cawthorne and Neha Arora)

(source: Reuters)