Indian Steel Industry – An Overview - OECD.org

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02-Dec-2010

Indian Steel Industry – An Overview 69th OECD Steel Committee Meeting Paris 2-3 December 2010

1

02-Dec-2010

Indian Steel Demand – Buoyant 56.5

60

52.1

52.4

Steel CAGR in last 5 yrs was 9.4%

46.8

50

41.4 36.4

26.5

40

29.9

27.3

24.7 30

20.3

22.2

Longs Flats

20 10 0

14.1

17

19.6

23

2.1

2.2

2.5

2.7

21.9

23.4

3.2

3.1

Alloys

2009-10

2008-09

2007-08

2006-07

2005-06

2004-05

Steel consumption growth in last 5 yrs was range bound at 9-13%, Per capita steel use is 48 kg vis-a-vis 35 kg in 2005 Steel demand expected to continue @10%+ CAGR till 2020

Steel Demand Driver 10.0 9.0 8.0 7.0 6.0 5.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0

9.5

9.7

9.0

8.2

7.0

9.0 7.3

7.6

8.0

8.1

 GDP growth to continue at 8-9%  Huge infrastructure investment by Govt. ~ $500 billion

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02-Dec-2010

Indian Steel Demand on High Pedestal 165

Long-term GDP Growth

GDP @9%

148

target rate ~9%

140

133

113

GDP @8%

115

105 78

90

33

26

40

75

59 57

52

65

15

1999-00

• •

2003-04

2007-08

2009-10

2012-13

2016-17

2019-20

High GDP growth - support to steel demand Steel intensity to go up with more fixed asset investment

Indian Steel Demand – Likely Sources Sector-wise incremental steel demand by 2012 (million MT) 1

3

4

100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0

~100

5

30

12 20 AS U

ay s

ns .D ur ab le s Co

Ra ilw

ta lG oo ds Ca pi

Au

to m

ob

ile s

ns t ra /C o In f

AS U

20

08

52

Source: In-house

 Private sector investment growing at 15% plus  Large infrastructure projects in Public-Private Partnership (PPP) mode  Foreign investment of nearly $40 billion committed in steel sector 6

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02-Dec-2010

Domestic Steel Availability 59.7

India: Steel Production (million MT)

60.0

50.2

50.0

44.4

41.3

38.6

40.0

29.7 26.3

24.7

27.0

22.1

20.4

19.2

30.0

53.5

52.8

Longs

22.3

2004-05

2005-06

2006-07

26.5

30.0

2009-10

21.0

26.4

2008-09

19.4

2003-04

10.0

25.5

2007-08

20.0

Flats

0.0 Source: JPC

 Steel consumption in Apr-Sep 2010 rose by 9.8% y-o-y  Capacity augmentation to meet domestic demand 7

Indian Steel Capacity By 2020 2009 SAIL JSW

7.8

3.2

TATA

6.8

6.2

ESSAR

9.9

4.6

ISPAT

3.0 2.0

RINL

2.9 3.9

JSPL 2.4

2012

POSCO

32.0

21.0

20.5

6.0

17.0

12.0 9.2

16.0

8.1

16.1

26.5

9.0 12.0

(million MT)

30.0 6.5

22.0

10.0

7.0

Additional capacity by 2020 ~230-240 million MT

3.0

ARCELOR…

0.0

33.5

20.5

18.0

SECONDARY

60.0

35.2

BSPL 1.22.8 3.0 BSL 0.6 5.4

2020

12.0

12.8

20.0

24.0

14.0

30.0

42.4

40.0

50.0

60.0

 Current capacity ~ 73 million MT  By the year 2012, Crude Steel Production Capacity Likely to be million tonnes

Source: MoS

110-120 8

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02-Dec-2010

Greenfield Projects – Update  10-15 million MT capacity at various stages where land has been acquired  Another 50 million MT capacity at preliminary stages such as land acquisition, statutory clearances etc.  The Global Crisis post-Sep. 2008 has caused deferment of some Greenfield projects  Land acquisition has become a critical factor for a few projects  Steel capacity by 2012 – expected to be 110-124 million MT

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Indian Steel – Policy Imperatives  Liberal policy regime – import duty at 5%  Export of raw materials exceeding domestic consumption  100% foreign investment allowed through automatic route even in mining sector  Focus on capacity building and consumption  Large Infrastructure Project in Public-Private Partnership (PPP) mode.  Demand Booster from infrastructure, housing, automobile, gas and oil pipelines, capital goods (machinery) and consumer goods. 10

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02-Dec-2010

Indian Steel – Impediments

 Capacity addition – hindered by difficulty in land acquisition  Uncertain Time frame for land acquisition, environmental clearances.  Concerns on depleting raw materials reserves

 Need for higher spending on infrastructure (roads, railways & ports)  Significant infrastructure constraints in roads, railways, ports, power.

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The Roadmap

 Accelerated capacity building in steel, through Brownfield route to meet demand in the medium term  Fast-tracking of Greenfield projects by way of better coordination & monitoring  New legal policy regimes on mining, land acquisition & rehabilitation  Encourage value addition and production of value added steel products

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02-Dec-2010

The Roadmap (Contd.)  Encourage beneficiation methods for utilization of low grade iron ore & fines  Energy efficiency, carbon emission reduction and new technology for higher productivity  Higher emphasis on resource optimization  Spread to niche international markets through quality steel products  World’s third largest steel producer by 2014 13

Thank You

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