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Business India News Updated Jun 9, 2026

Indian Steelmakers Launch Multi-Year Capex Cycle to Hit 300 MT Target

Indian steelmakers are entering a multi-year investment cycle to expand capacity to 300 million tonnes by 2030. Top four producers have increased aggregate capex by 40% to Rs 700 billion for fiscal 2027. Strong domestic demand and trade protection measures are driving the investment push. However, any prolonged weakness in demand could lead to overcapacity and pressure on steel prices.

Indian steelmakers to begin multi-year capex cycle as capacity target rises to 300 mt: S&P Global

New Delhi, June 9

Indian steelmakers are set to enter a multi-year investment cycle as the country targets expanding its steel-making capacity to 300 million tonnes by 2030, according to a report by S&P Global.

The country's top four listed steel producers have announced a 40 per cent year-on-year increase in aggregate capital expenditure (capex) for fiscal 2027 (ending March 31), representing an investment of Rs 700 billion, which is up from Rs 500 billion in fiscal 2026.

"This is the start of a multi-year capex cycle as India aims to increase steel capacity to 300 million ton by 2030. The top four account for half of the country's steel output," the report said.

The investment push is being driven by strong domestic demand. India's finished steel consumption stood at 165 million tonnes in fiscal 2026, and S&P Global expects annual steel consumption to increase by more than 50 million tonnes over the next five years.

The capacity expansion is also being supported by trade protection measures. "The capacity addition comes at a time when the local producers face reduced competition from low-priced overseas supply, as safeguard duties continue to curb cheaper imports," it said.

Introduced provisionally in April 2025, the 11 per cent -12 per cent, duties on steel imports were extended through April 2028 in early 2026, it noted.

According to S&P Global, sector-wide earnings are rising in the Indian steel industry, supported by firm domestic steel prices and healthy demand.

Stressing on the geopolitical conflict, the report noted, "While in the Middle East introduces second-order effects, primarily through higher freight and elevated energy costs, resilient steel prices should offset the impact on profit margins."

However, Indian steel companies are "well-positioned to absorb heavy capital outlays," and "capital investments will likely stay elevated beyond fiscal 2027," as per S&P Global

"India aims to expand total steel capacity from 220 million tons to 300 million tons by 2030. This would entail an annual capital outlay of about USD 15 billion over the next five years."

Meanwhile, the report notes that "given the significant capacity additions, any prolonged weakness in domestic demand would be a key risk. The resulting overcapacity could put pressure on steel prices and earnings."

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Finally some good news for the steel sector! 🇮🇳 Those safeguard duties on imports are needed to protect local industry, but we can't ignore that higher steel costs for downstream users like auto and construction. Let's hope the domestic capacity expansion brings prices down in the long run. Balanced growth is key!

Vikram M

I'm a mechanical engineer working in a private steel plant in Maharashtra. Can confirm that the capex cycle has already started - we've seen new orders for blast furnaces and rolling mills. The 15 billion USD per year investment is massive. But my worry is that China's overcapacity hasn't gone away and if global demand slows, cheap imports could still hit us even with duties. Need to remain competitive on quality and costs.

Ananya R

Great to see Indian industry investing heavily! But I hope this expansion also prioritises green steel - those blast furnaces are carbon-intensive. The world is moving toward decarbonisation and if India adds 80 million tonnes of traditional capacity, we might be stuck with stranded assets in 15 years. Let's aim for 300mt with lower emissions too. 😊

Rohit P

S&P Global report is on point - domestic demand is the real driver. With Pradhan Mantri Awaas Yojana, highway construction, and railway expansion, we need that steel. The safeguard duties are a sensible temporary measure, but we can't rely on them forever. Local industry needs to become globally competitive without protection. 300mt is a bold target and I believe we'll get there 💪

Siddharth J

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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