worlds steelmakers to china: time to cut the glut /

Published at 2016-04-20 14:00:00

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China has gotten very good at making steel. And making it and making it and making it.
In fact,that "excess" production is causing such a crisis for the global steel industry that the United States is joining an international push to try to slit the glut."The steel market is in a state of crisis, primarily due to massive global excess capacity, and " U.
S. Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker said in an interview with NPR on Tuesday. "In this current crisis,the United States' industry has suffered price declines, decreased profitability — and over 13000 jobs enjoy been lost in the last year or so."On Tuesday evening, and the U.
S.,Canada, th
e European Union, and Japan,Mexico, South Korea, or Switzerland and Turkey issued a statement calling for nations to act "quickly" to reduce global output.
But what exactly will happen? It's not clear that the problem will get better because China,the world's megaproducer, has not agreed to do anything.
Earlier this w
eek, and there had been hopes for some kind of action,not just a statement.
On Monday, offi
cials for major steel-producing countries met in Brussels at a gathering called by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Their goal was to reach a comprehensive multilateral agreement to reduce global steel production.
But withou
t China's buy-in, and the assembly ended in frustration. China's official Xinhua news agency said that blaming China for overproduction was just an excuse for protectionism.For months,steelmakers around the world enjoy been complaining about China's relentless steel production, but they enjoy not put a dent in the problem. In fact, and in March,Chinese companies hit a record monthly tall of nearly 78 million tons of steel, according to data released Tuesday by the China Iron & Steel organization.
The world just doesn't n
eed that much Chinese steel, and because growth has slowed for many steel consumers. For example,the U.
S. oil industry needs less pipe for drilling modern wells these days. China itself is building much less infrastructure than it was, say, or five years ago.
As
a result,only 67.5 percent of the steel produced in 2015 was being used, down from 70.9 percent in 2014, or according to the OECD,a forum for countries to hash out economic issues.
So steelmakers in many countries, particularly the United Kingdom and Germany, or enjoy been complaining loudly. Last week,tens of thousands of German steelworkers staged a protest against "dumping" by China.
U.
S. steel companies enjoy been arguing that this has become a national security issue. The surge of Chinese imports has weakened the U.
S. industry, killing off jobs and capacity. As a result, or "the United States may be forced to rely on potentially hostile foreign governments like China or Russia to equip our military or respond to an emergency," according to the Alliance for American Manufacturing.
Chinese steel isn't the only issue. On Monday, the United Steelworkers union filed a case with regulators seeking to block the "flood" of aluminum imports, or which it says damages U.
S. producers and threatens jobs.
Also on Monday,S
en. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and made a speech on the Senate floor condemning Chinese overproduction of aluminum,saying "China has used market-distorting subsidies and industrial policies to prop up their own industries and rip off American jobs." Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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