EU steelworks directors write an open letter

Article

EU steelworks directors write an open letter


Climate, competitiveness and jobs depend on the European Parliament's upcoming policy decisions

On Monday, 30 May 2022, European steelmakers, associated in EUROFER, sent an open letter to the European Parliament and the Member States. According to them, the EU's proposals on emissions trading and carbon border adjustment derail the green transition.

We bring the open letter in full:

The European steel industry is a strategic sector for the EU’s green transition, economic resilience and independence. We have clear plans and concrete projects to reduce our sector’s CO2 emissions by at least 30 percent by 2030 and to achieve climate-neutral steel production in the European Union by 2050. These commitments represent a truly industrial revolution that requires a massive €30 billion capital investment in breakthrough technologies over the coming eight years and a significant increase in operational costs stemming from the use of decarbonized electricity and hydrogen.

However, European legislators are now considering proposals on the EU’s Emissions Trading System (ETS) and the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) that undermine our capacity to invest in these projects and derail the transition to green steel production in Europe.

In Europe, new allocation rules will suddenly reduce the main CO2 benchmark by around 40 percent.

The proposals weaken carbon-leakage protection of our industry in the domestic and global markets, favoring international competitors which are not subject to equivalent carbon costs. In Europe, new allocation rules will suddenly reduce the main CO2 benchmark by around 40 percent — because of one plant that was previously not in the scope — and set a value which no company can achieve in just three years. This is due to a premature transition from the free allocation and indirect cost compensation system to a CBAM which has not yet been tested. Circumvention and resource shuffling are only a few of the many risks that could undermine the CBAM’s effectiveness. Moreover, the CBAM does not yet foresee any measure to preserve the EU’s 20 million metric tons of steel exports per year, worth €45 billion, and the 30,000 jobs that are directly dependent on these.

The proposals also remove massive allowances from the market, further driving the carbon and electricity price in Europe at a time when businesses and households are struggling with skyrocketing energy costs and inflation. Finally, they fail to capture the much higher carbon footprint of stainless steel imports derived from the embedded alloying elements.

Avoid further scaling back existing carbon-leakage protection until the CBAM has proven its effectiveness and a solution for exports is in place.

We call on the European Parliament and Council to immediately address these concerns and in particular to:

● Avoid further scaling back existing carbon-leakage protection until the CBAM has proven its effectiveness and a solution for exports is in place.

● Prevent a sharp decrease in free allocation for existing steel plants which would result from a modification of the benchmark scope. Instead, low-carbon technologies must be rewarded without reducing prematurely benchmark values, at least in the first years when such technologies are introduced at an industrial scale.

The aforementioned changes to the ETS and CBAM will allow us to make the green steel transformation happen now within the EU. Our investments will greatly benefit climate protection, the EU’s industrial competitiveness and hundreds of thousands of jobs across the EU.

Geert Van Poelvoorde, CEO, ArcelorMittal Europe
Bernhard Osburg, CEO, thyssenkrupp Steel Europe AG
Henrik Adam, Chairman of the Board, Tata Steel Netherlands Holding
Francesc Rubiralta Rubio, Chairman and CEO, CELSA Group
Olavi Huhtala, CEO, SSAB Europe
Mario Caldonazzo, CEO, Arvedi
Hubert Zajicek, CEO, voestalpine Steel Division 
Lorenzo Riva, CEO, Riva Group
Gunnar Groebler, CEO, Salzgitter AG
Timoteo Di Maulo, CEO, Aperam
Karl-Ulrich Köhler, Chairman of the Board, SHS-Stahl-Holding-Saar Gmbh &Co 
Ajay Aggarwal, President of the Board, Liberty Galati
Heikki Malinen, President and CEO, Outokumpu Oyj
Jan Czudek, CEO, Třinecké železárny
Bernardo Velázquez Herreros, President, UNESID – Spanish Steel Association    
Carlos Gil Robles, Administrator, Megasa
Hans Jürgen Kerkhoff, President, Wirtschaftsvereinigung Stahl
James E. Bruno, President, US Steel Košice
Zlatislav Ivkov, General Manager, Stomana Industry S.A.
Markus Ritter, CEO, Marienhütte Stahl & Walzwerk GmbH
George Michos, CEO, Sidenor Group
Vasileios Goumas, CEO, Hellenic Halyvourgia
Markus Menges and Florian Glück, Managing Directors, Badische Stahlwerke GmbH
Radek Strouhal, CEO, Vítkovice Steel
Giuseppe Pasini, President, Feralpi Group
Claudio Riva, President, Riva Acciaio
Alessandro Banzato, CEO, Acciaierie Venete
Antonio Marcegaglia, President and CEO, Marcegaglia Steel
Giuseppe Lucchini, President, Lucchini Rs
Michele Della Briotta, President Europe, Tenaris
Klaus Enwald, CEO, Ovako Imatra Oy Ab 
Alexander Becker, CEO, GMH Gruppe
Francisco Irazusta, Executive Chairman, Tubos Reunidos SA
Nicos Georgakellos, President, ENXE – Hellenic Steelmakers Union
Ionel Bors, President, UniRomSider – Romanian Steel Producers’ Union
Stefan Dzienniak, President of the board, HIPH – Polish Steel Association
Roman Stiftner, Managing Director, Austrian Mining and Steel Association
Ivan Jurkošek, General Manager, Štore Steel
Annika Roos, Managing Director, Jernkontoret
Kimmo Järvinen, Managing Director, Metallinjalostajat
Philippe Coigné, Director General, Groupement de la Sidérurgie
Bruno Jacquemin, Délégué Général, A3M
Daniel Urban, Chairman, Ocelářská unie
Anton Petrov, Chairman of the Board, Bulgarian Association of the Metallurgical Industry
Caterina Epis, Institutional Relations Director, Tenaris
Ianc Petru, Executive Manager, UNITUB – General Union of Romanian Tubes Producers
Michel Tellier, CEO, Reinosa Forgings & Castings
Timo Rautalahti, CEO, Boliden Harjavalta
Klaus Peters, Secretary General, ESTEP – European Steel Technology Platform
Axel Eggert, Director General, The European Steel Association (EUROFER)

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