There’s a type of Chinese steel dumping going on that not even the Trump administration is talking about, according to Ohio-based AK Steel Holding Corp.
The only North American producer of steel used for electric-grid applications is working on ways to stop China dumping its excess electrical-steel capacity, AK Chief Executive Officer Roger Newport said in a telephone interview Friday. The accusations come as the U.S. Department of Commerce undertakes a Section 232 investigation into whether steel imports threaten national security.
“They’re shipping it everywhere so now all countries are trying to bring in electrical steel, whether it’s Korea, Japan, China, you name it,” Newport said. “They got it because China’s been infiltrating the markets everywhere. It’s just like in the carbon-steel cases, it’s a whac-a-mole.”
The issue dates back to 2008-2009 when China brought a trade case against AK Steel and Allegheny Technologies Inc., blocking the two companies from shipping electrical steel to China, Newport said. The World Trade Organization eventually ruled the trade case as illegal, but not before China had developed domestic capacity, he said.
AK Steel has 300,000-plus tons of electrical- steel capacity. China has defended its growing presence in overseas steel markets, with Premier Li Keqiang saying overcapacity isn’t the fault of one single country. The nation will use the WTO’s dispute-settlement mechanism to protect its interests, the Commerce Ministry has said. Joe Deaux, Bloomberg
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