Nippon Steel in talks to buy steel mill in Southeast Asia

30 Nov, 2021

TOKYO: Japan’s biggest steelmaker Nippon Steel Corp is in talks to buy a steel mill in Southeast Asia to secure iron-making resources in the growing market and step up its overseas expansion, a senior executive said.

“The discussions are under way to secure iron sources in ASEAN,” Takahiro Mori, executive vice president at Nippon Steel, told Reuters last week.

He declined to comment on details, but said the deal could involve an electric furnace. The world’s No.5 steelmaker said in March that it may consider acquiring or investing in integrated steel mills in China and ASEAN countries to boost its global capacity of crude steel output to 100 million tonnes.

“One hundred million is a symbolic figure for us to have a certain presence and influence as a global steel major,” Mori said. As of March, Nippon Steel’s global output capacity stood at 70 million tonnes.

The company is boosting capacity at its Indian joint venture with ArcelorMittal SA, and building an electric furnace at its US joint venture with ArcelorMittal. Japan and the United States have recently agreed to start discussions aimed at tackling additional US tariffs on Japanese steel and aluminium imports, an irritant in trade relations between the two.

“Our export volume to the United States is not large, but it has nearly halved since the extra tariffs were imposed,” Mori said, pointing to seamless pipes and railway rails as affected ones. Nippon Steel wants the tariffs to be abolished as it would help increase its exports and profits, Mori said.

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