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20
March 2018
India's ambition to become a major steel exporter could be disrupted by
US import curbs, Steel Minister Chaudhary Birender Singh said,
underscoring the need for free trade. The
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"Our exports have increased
substantially, about 40 percent growth during January to December (2017),"
Singh told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday.
"What I foresee is that our exports are
going to grow. In that case, these kind of disturbances should not take
place."
Last week, US President Donald Trump set
import tariffs of 25 percent on steel and 10 percent on aluminium, to come into
force in 15 days, a disputed move that threatens to spiral into a trade war.
India's stance, Singh said, will be to call
for unrestricted trade and watch for responses from other steel-producing
countries.
"We can't remain in isolation," he
said, adding it had similar interests to those of other steel-producing
countries. The Total Investment &
Insurance Solutions
"We are not exactly in wait and watch mode but the pace and
intention of the other steel producing countries should also be watched
closely."
Also Read: How Trump's tariff move will only make matters worse for the American economy. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
Also Read: How Trump's tariff move will only make matters worse for the American economy. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
According to a Feb. 22 note prepared by the
steel ministry, India expects a loss of $130 million due to the US import
tariffs, which accounts for just 5 percent of the country's total steel
exports. The Total Investment &
Insurance Solutions
India was already expecting a 6 percent fall
in exports to the United States for
2017/18, to 333,656 tonnes, it said.
Trade tensions are threatening what is the
best global economic growth outlook in seven years, the OECD said on Tuesday.
India's much-delayed $1 billion joint venture between ArcelorMittal and state-owned Steel Authority of India Ltd to produce automotive steel may finally be signed by March-end, Singh said.
India's much-delayed $1 billion joint venture between ArcelorMittal and state-owned Steel Authority of India Ltd to produce automotive steel may finally be signed by March-end, Singh said.
SAIL and ArcelorMittal signed a preliminary
understanding in 2015 to jointly produce 1.2 million tonnes of automotive steel
a year, but disagreements over commercial terms have delayed the venture that
would give the Luxembourg-based company a foothold in the world's
fastest-growing steel market.
SAIL was also in talks with Canada's Teck
Resources, the largest North American producer of coking coal used to make
steel, for long-term purchase agreements, Singh said. The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
South Korean steel major POSCO, meanwhile,
has been in talks with Indian mills about joint venture opportunities, he said.
"They (POSCO) approached us about six
months ago to have a discussion on certain collaborations," Singh said,
adding that a project with POSCO might take off within two years without giving
more details.
Singh said India was pushing foreign companies
to set up plants in India to benefit from a procurement policy that gives
preference to local mills, as the country needed to do more to make high-end
steel products.
"High-end steel production is the major
area of our concern," he said.The
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