Chinese overcapacity is crushing the global steel industry
Governments are stepping in to protect local producers
Each year China makes as much steel as the rest of the world combined. The vast scale of its output—around 1bn tonnes a year—is obscured by the fact that most of it stays in the country. Lately, however, China’s exports of the metal have surged, reaching 90m tonnes in 2023, up by 35% on the previous year (see chart 1). That may be a fraction of China’s total production, but it is more than what America or Japan make in a year. And it is enough to build a thousand Golden Gate bridges.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Smelted”
Business September 21st 2024
Discover more
Why Microsoft Excel won’t die
The business world’s favourite software program enters its 40th year
The trouble with Elon Musk’s robotaxi dream
Scaling up self-driving taxis will be hard, and competition will be fierce
Sir Jim Ratcliffe, chemicals magnate turned sports mogul
The British billionaire is buying up teams from sailing to football to cycling
Masayoshi Son is back in Silicon Valley—and late to the AI race
This isn’t the first time the Japanese tech investor has missed the hot new thing
When workplace bonuses backfire
The gelignite of incentives
China is writing the world’s technology rules
It is setting standards for everything from 6G to quantum computing