Key Points

The new safeguard duty on steel imports could significantly raise costs for key industries like auto and construction. Major manufacturers including Tata Motors and Maruti Suzuki oppose the move, warning of higher input expenses. GTRI argues the duty unfairly benefits large steel producers while harming downstream sectors. The dispute highlights tensions between protecting domestic industry and maintaining competitive manufacturing costs.

Key Points: Steel safeguard duties may harm auto and construction sectors warns GTRI

  • Three-year safeguard duty starts at 12% declining annually
  • DGTR cites surge in Chinese steel imports hurting domestic profits
  • Automakers and electronics firms oppose higher input costs
  • GTRI says Indian steelmakers remain profitable despite import claims
3 min read

Safeguard import duties on steel could cripple auto, engineering, and construction sectors: GTRI

GTRI warns new steel import duties could raise costs for auto, engineering, and construction industries while benefiting a few large producers.

"Duties would cripple auto, engineering, and construction sectors – Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI)"

New Delhi, August 18

The three-year safeguard duty on steel imports by Directorate General of Trade Remedies (DGTR) could cripple the auto, engineering, and construction sectors by pushing up input costs and squeezing downstream users, stated a report by the Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI).

The safeguard duty, confirmed on August 16, will start at 12 per cent in the first year, followed by 11.5 per cent in the second year and 11 per cent in the third year.

DGTR stated that the decision is taken due to a sharp surge in steel imports, especially from China, and a steep fall in domestic industry profits.

However, GTRI stated "that duties would cripple auto, engineering, and construction sectors".

DGTR launched probe in December 2024 after complaints from major producers such as AMNS, JSW Steel, Jindal Steel & Power, and SAIL, covered a wide range of products including hot-rolled and cold-rolled steel, metallic-coated, and colour-coated steel.

A provisional 12 per cent duty had already been imposed on April 21, 2025. In its final order, DGTR said imports rose "recently, suddenly, sharply and significantly" during October 2023 to September 2024.

As per data, Chinese exports alone reached 110.7 million MT in 2024, a 25 per cent jump from 2023, with much of the excess supply being redirected to India.

Imported hot-rolled coils landed at USD 450 per MT in May 2025, which was nearly USD 87 per MT lower than Indian costs, even after duties.

Domestic profit before tax plunged 76 per cent, which DGTR said amounted to "serious injury" to local producers.

However, GTRI stated that more than 250 stakeholders, including leading automakers, electronics firms, and industry bodies opposed the duty. Tata Motors, Maruti Suzuki, Hyundai, Toyota Kirloskar, LG, Samsung, Whirlpool, ABB, Siemens, Crompton Greaves, Havells, and L&T were among those warning that the move would raise input costs, harm export competitiveness, and make customer-specific grades harder to source.

ACMA, EEPC, and IEEMA echoed similar concerns, saying many grades of steel are not produced locally and imports are essential. They argued that import volumes were only returning to pre-COVID levels, not surging, and criticized DGTR's choice of base year.

GTRI also countered DGTR's findings, noting that India remains a net steel importer with demand in FY2024-25 estimated at 137.82 MT against domestic production of 132.89 MT.

It pointed out that steelmakers still enjoyed strong profitability, with Tata Steel recording a 21 per cent EBITDA margin in India and SAIL at 11.6 per cent.

According to GTRI, far from being under distress, Indian steel producers were thriving, and the safeguard duty risks creating cartel-like conditions when combined with Quality Control Orders.

The GTRI also noted that the safeguard duty would end up protecting a few large producers at the cost of India's wider manufacturing ecosystem.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Finally some action against Chinese dumping! 🇮🇳 Our steel industry was suffering while China floods our markets with cheap steel. Short-term pain for long-term gain - we must protect our domestic producers.
A
Aditya G
The timing couldn't be worse for infrastructure projects. Construction costs will skyrocket when we're trying to build roads and bridges. Why can't we find a middle ground?
S
Sarah B
As someone working in manufacturing, I see both sides. The 76% profit drop for domestic producers is serious, but the auto sector's concerns are valid too. Maybe phased implementation would help?
K
Karthik V
Why are we always reactive instead of proactive? Our steel industry should have invested in better technology years ago to compete globally. Now everyone suffers because of their inefficiency.
M
Meera T
The government must ensure this doesn't create a monopoly for big steel players. We've seen how cartelization hurts consumers in other sectors. Strong monitoring needed! 👀

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

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50