New Report Projects Global Steel Scrap Market to Reach 631.5 Million Tons by 2015

A new report by the firm Global Industry Analysts Inc. forecasts the global ferrous scrap market to reach 631.5 million tons by 2015.

A new report by the firm Global Industry Analysts Inc. forecasts the global ferrous scrap market to reach 631.5 million tons by 2015. The figure is expected to be driven by the rise in steel production following a lull in steel industry operations due to the global recession.

ARRA Helped Fund Some Road Work, but Long-Term Plan Still Lacking, Says NSSGA
National Stone, Sand and Gravel Association (NSSGA) Chairman Bill Schneider has testified today before a U.S. House of Representatives committee on the state of his industry.

Schneider, who is also president and CEO of Knife River Corp., Bismarck, N.D., told the Transportation and Infrastructure committiee that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) helped maintain the market and prevented significant erosion of the workforce in the transportation construction market of the aggregates industry.

But Schneider cautioned that ARRA is a one-time bankroll and that construction workers are on unemployed at more than double the rate of other American workers. He also urged support for a long-term highway funding and multi-year authorization bill and for making it a priority in Congress.
 

Improving sales in the automobile industry and enhanced construction activity, the hardest hit segments due to the global recession, are expected to fuel demand for ferrous scrap. Another area that will have a positive impact on the ferrous scrap market, according to the report, is its benefit to the environment.

The report, titled Steel Scrap: A Global Strategic Business Report, notes that while the ferrous scrap market was adversely affected by the global economic decline, the economic recovery of developed countries is likely to ensure greater availability of steel scrap. As western economies have traditionally driven the scrap generation, decline in steelmaking operations affects the global supply levels of steel scrap, the report indicates.

The report notes that rising demand for raw materials used in the steel-making industry from rapidly expanding emerging markets such as China, India and Brazil is expected to fuel demand for steel scrap.

Establishment and operational commencement of new steel mills using electric arc furnace (EAF) technology is also expected to fuel demand for steel scrap. EAFs use ferrous scrap as a raw material. The report notes that European companies using EAF technology account for more than 40 percent of all steel production. Further, more than 55 percent of the steel produced in the European Union uses ferrous scrap as a raw material. Meanwhile, the European steel industry is witnessing lower volumes of steel production, lower scrap consumption and lower levels of new scrap generation.

A major challenge facing the steel scrap market is the imposition of restrictions on export of steel scrap by several countries, which is expected to adversely affect countries that rely exclusively on imports for meeting domestic requirements, according to the report. The restrictions not only lead to price rise in the global markets, but also provide unfair competitive advantage to domestic manufacturers, and enhance cost of production, the report says.

China leads the world market in the production of steel. However, the country consumes a relatively smaller proportion of scrap steel for steel production. Robust Chinese demand, along with strong economic development, has been the driving force behind the growth in Chinese steel industry, the report indicates.

For more details about the market research report, visit http://www.strategyr.com/Steel_Scrap_Market_Report.asp .

 

September 2010
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