Competitiveness and Challenges in The Steel Industry: OECD Steel Committee 74 Session
Competitiveness and Challenges in The Steel Industry: OECD Steel Committee 74 Session
Competitiveness and Challenges in The Steel Industry: OECD Steel Committee 74 Session
2010 12 14 16 18 2020
Share of China
45 46 46 45 45 44
Percent
SOURCE: World Steel Association (WSA); McKinsey Steel Demand Model McKinsey & Company | 5
The steel industry is very volatile and with depressed profitability since
2008 – mature regions are losing in profitability
China Developed Asia Average
EBITDA margin
Percent1 Europe NAFTA
-5
2000 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 2012
1 Based on a sample of 84 of the largest steel companies globally
SOURCE: McKinsey Steel Model, McKinsey Mining Value Pools Model McKinsey & Company | 7
From a perspective on the EBITDA pool, emerging regions benefited most
from the China-driven boom of the last decade
HRC value chain EBITDA pool Mining Non-OECD steel OECD steel
USD billions
CAGR
2003 - 2012
164 17%
136
38
121 33%
56
58
39
37
10 9%
28
13 42
14
16 7 15 -1%
657
698
255 622 4 ▪ Asset quality 3 ▪ Access to raw
and actions materials/resources
35
▪ Operational ▪ Fx-rate and cost
performance inflation
Price Cost EBITDA Price Cost EBITDA
▪ … ▪ Regulation
2008 2012 ▪ …
SOURCE: SBB, MEPS, McKinsey Flat Steel database McKinsey & Company | 10
1 Globally competitiveness of some regions gets challenged through
erosion of cost position – example Europe/Germany
Europe 1st quartile
Global HRC cost curve1, ex works, USD/t
Other
2002 German plants
Marginal
800 1st quartile
manufacturer
600 Europe
400 ~ 55%
200
0
SOURCE: McKinsey flat steel cost model; steel press; VDEh; WSA McKinsey & Company | 11
Direct emissions
2 Steel will remain a source of CO2 emissions which is a
Indirect emissions
consequence of the process …
Percent, 2010e
Ferro-alloys2
Agriculture 4
Mining1
13.3 24.4 Power 17
1 Includes mining and beneficiation of iron ore, coal, limestone, and ferro-alloy ores
2 Production of Ni, FeCr, FeSi, FeMn, SiMn and Al consumed during steel production
SOURCE: McKinsey (Steel CO2 Model; Global Carbon Cost Curve 2.1) McKinsey & Company | 12
2 … however, technology differences can lead to significant differences
in emissions
BF route
PCI coal Ferroalloys Coke Fuel (including Electricity Pig Iron Limestone Mining
smelting off-gas)
+52%
11
+288% +272%
46 3.2
SOURCE: Ministério das Minas e Energia, Aneel, Economist Intelligence Unit, James F. King McKinsey & Company | 15
3 Also, import and export taxes influence competitiveness, while EXAMPLES
protecting or even taking away the need for continuous improvement
Import duties for steel products Export barriers for raw materials
Import duties and taxes1 Semi-finished products Export duties, iron ore India
Percent Finished iron & steel products Percent Export bans
18 20
2 - 17 ▪ Indonesia export
ban on iron,
16
except for miners
14 that build local
processing facili-
2 - 12 12
12 ties from 2014
3 - 10 ▪ Bans on scrap
10
5 - 10 exports in Indo-
8
8 nesia, Mongolia,
5 - 7.5 Saudi Arabia, and
6 5 many other
countries2
4
2
2
0 0
0
Brazil China India Turkey South Pre 03/2011 Post 03/2011
Africa
Capacity
mt
2,200
2,000
1,800
1,600
Non-OECD
1,400
1,200 +720
1,000
800
600 OECD
400
+105
200
0
2004 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 2013
Year
18 18
HRC cost
USD/t Result
731 ▪ Once capacities are
688 59
603 642 offshored, there will
Depreciation2 69
61 50 be no economies to
HRC 28 24 51 relocate quantities
conversion back to Europe
Programme elements
▪ Assessment of impact of existing and new policies and legislation on competitiveness
Regulatory
framework ▪ Support sustainable steel production to boost demand and EU market share
▪ Fight VAT evasion and black markets in steel
▪ Promote steel end-use sectors, e.g., through simulating demand for alternative fuel
Boosting demand vehicles and renovation of buildings by energy and resource-efficient construction
▪ Ensure to eliminate or reduce tariffs and non-tariff barriers on third markets for EU steel
and raw materials
Level playing field ▪ Update anti-dumping and anti-subsidy regulations
▪ Monitor scrap markets and include coking coal in the list of critical raw materials
▪ Create regulatory environment conducive to sustainable growth (renewable energy,
Energy, climate, impact of the ETS on electricity prices, energy efficiency)
resource policies ▪ Support internationally binding agreements on climate change and GHG
SOURCE: McKinsey "Lightweight, heavy impact"; advanced industries perspective 2012 McKinsey & Company | 24
A However, competitiveness of aluminum relative to steel has
dramatically increased due to falling price differential …
Averaged monthly price of steel and aluminum Steel, European CRC
USD per tonne Aluminum, LME daily official
3,500
▪ Steel to
aluminum
3,000
spreads have
been shrinking
2,500
▪ However,
current gap
2,000
between 2 raw
materials
1,500 is over USD
1,200/tonne
1,000
500
2000 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 2013
SOURCE: MEPS Transaction Prices HRC; London Metal Exchange McKinsey & Company | 25
HIGH-LEVEL
A … with the result that after "cost in use" calculations the ESTIMATES
aluminum disadvantage is affordable and attractive
Body panel example, high-strength steel (HSLA) to aluminum cost bridge
Indexed
20 156
54
30 +41%
110
152
Price per Higher per Lower Net Increased Additional Increased Net per part
steel part lb landed density of material scrap coatings/ tooling costs
(indexed raw material aluminum cost post pro- life
to 100 for cost1 requires cessing
mild steel) fewer lbs
SOURCE: Interviews; ISIS; SRI; The Aluminum Association; FKA Weight Reduction Report McKinsey & Company | 26
A Ongoing innovation has been a source for enhancing competitiveness
Specific CO2 emission (Average BF/BOF and EAF) Specific dust emission
Metric ton CO2 per t crude steel Kg dust per t crude steel
2.5 10
8
2.0 -45% 6
-96%
4
1.5 2
0 0
1960 70 80 90 2000 2007 1960 70 80 90 2000 2007
0 0
1960 70 80 90 2000 2007 1970 80 90 2000 2007
SOURCE: Wirtschaftsvereinigung Stahl, plant facts, McKinsey CO2 model McKinsey & Company | 27
B Capabilities of producing high value added products increase, with
require producers in OECD countries to invest in more competiveness
High value add capacity additions 2012 - 14 and capacity evolution 2000 -
13
kt ▪ Downstream steel
production is signi-
New CRC 38.0 ficantly built up in
90% of emerging regions,
capacities in with focus on value
New HDG 8.2 "new world" add
▪ Relevance of
113 152 205 221 224 = 100% producers in mature
world and therefore
RoW CRC 25% steel production in
29% 30% 29% 29%
those regions is
decreasing
Loss of
▪ Steel mills need to
RoW HDG 47% 46% have the funds to
49% 51% 51% share EU-27
compete in these
EU-27 CRC 8% -8.3% dynamic develop-
7% 5% 5% ments
5%
EU-27 HDG 20% 18% 15% 15% 15%
Benedikt_Zeumer@mckinsey.com
+49 (211) 136-4142