In 2017, the US imported 34.5 million metric tons of steel mill products from several countries including Canada 16%, Brazil 14%, Korea 10%, Mexico 9%, Turkey 8%, Japan 5% and other 40%. The 34.5 million metric tons is divided by Semi-Finished 23%, Long Products 19%, Pipe and Tube 22% and Flat Products 36%.
Steel Industry Executive
Summary: February 2018 Highlights
· From
November to December 2017, U.S. imports of steel mill products decreased 11% to
2.2 million metric tons from 2.5 million metric tons.
· In
December 2017, capacity utilization was estimated at 71.9%, a decrease of 1.4
percentage points from 73.3% in November.
Overall capacity utilization in 2017 averaged 73.9%, up from the 2016 average of 70.5%.
· Total U.S. steel production in 2017 increased to 81.6 million metric tons from 78.5 million metric tons in 2016, a 3.4% increase.
Trade –
U.S. Imports of Steel Mill Products
From November to December 2017, U.S. imports
of steel mill products decreased 11% to 2.2 million metric tons from 2.5
million metric tons.
December 2017 steel imports were down 9% from one year ago and down 11% from
the 2016 average monthly volume of 2.5 million metric tons.
Steel
mill imports in December were down 45% from the most recent high import volume
peak of 4 million metric tons in October 2014.
January
2017 license data suggest an increase in imports from December. Note: Import
license data, indicated in a different color in the graph below, are not
official U.S. Census data, reflect a rolling total of licenses received in the
most recent two months, and are subject to change.
Prices
Benchmark domestic steel prices have been
relatively flat in recent months after gains in the first quarter of 2017.
U.S.
domestic prices for hot-rolled band increased to $736 per metric ton in January
2017. Compared to one year ago, the price for hot-rolled band was up 6.7
percent.
Cold-rolled coil prices increased to $911 per metric ton in January, a 1.1
percent increase from last year, while standard plate prices decreased to $840
per metric ton, a 12.4 percent increase from a year ago.
Monthly U.S.
Crude Steel Production
Global steel production increased by 1.1% to
138.1 million metric tons in December 2017 from 136.5 million metric tons in
November 2017.
Global
production in December 2017 increased 3% from one year ago.
Total
world crude steel production in 2017 increased by 5.3% from the 2016 level of
1.6 million metric tons.
China’s
December 2017 production level increased by 1.4% from November 2017 to 67
million metric tons.
China’s
total production in 2017 amounted to 845 million metric tons, a 4.7% increase
from the previous year.
The
European Union 28 remains the second largest producer, behind China, with
December 2017 production level of 13.6 million metric tons, a 2.3% decrease
from 14 million metric tons in November 2017.
https://enforcement.trade.gov/steel/license/documents/execsumm.pdf
Comments
So, if
the US produces 81.6 million metric tons of steel and still imports 34.5
million metric tons of steel, then, we need to increase US steel production by
42% to make all the steel we use. But it
isn’t that simple. There are lots of formulas for steel and lots of different
specifications and lots of buyers and sellers.
Also,
technology has changed since World War II and auto manufacturers use more
plastic than steel, because steel rusts. But steel can be coated to not
rust. Also, we have composite materials
that have replaced traditional building materials, like concrete fiber board
and composite replacements for wood. We no longer use steel culverts that last
for 25 years for drainage, because we now have composite material pipes that
last over 100 years.
Building
a bridge or a skyscraper requires structural steel that should be coated and we
should be able to produce all the steel we need for these.
Construction
and farm equipment still uses steel and we should be able to produce steel for
US manufacturers.
When it
comes to steel parts for appliances and other devices, we need to see if some
of this can be exempted.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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