13,028.46 TRY BIST 100 BIST 100
51.02 EUR EUR EUR
44.48 USD USD USD
6.48 CNY CNY CNY
0.13 CNY CNY/EUR CNY/EUR
43.92 TRY Interest Interest
98.97 USD Fossil Oil Fossil Oil
5.64 USD Copper Copper
107.04 USD Silver Silver
107.14 USD Iron Ore Iron Ore
378.00 USD Shipbreaking Scrap Shipbreaking Scrap
6,760.70 TRY Gold (gr) Gold (gr)
108.00 USD Iron Ore 61% Fe Iron Ore 61% Fe

Weak demand continues in the EU steel market, with a limited recovery expected in 2026

Apparent steel consumption in the European Union continued its weak trend in the third quarter of 2025. According to Eurofer’s Q3 2025 Report, despite modest recoveries in the past two consecutive quarters, demand conditions remain subdued. This situation emerged following the conflict in Ukraine in the second quarter of 2022 and the subsequent surge in energy prices, which created pressure on production costs.

Weak demand continues in the EU steel market, with a limited recovery expected in 2026

In 2022, the stagnation observed in EU steel-using sectors led to an 8% decline. In 2023 and 2024, apparent steel consumption contracted by 6% and 1.1%, respectively. For 2025, the projected decline is 0.2%, a more moderate figure compared to the previous forecast (-0.9%). In 2026, a 3.1% recovery in consumption is expected (previous forecast: 3.4%), yet volumes will remain below pre-pandemic levels.

Overview of the EU Steel Market

In the first quarter of 2025, apparent steel consumption rose by 2.2% y-o-y to 33.8 million tons. Domestic deliveries increased by 1.4%, while the full-year decline in 2024 stood at 2.8%. Total steel imports into the EU decreased by 0.6% in Q1 2025, with the share outside of consumption at 25%. In the second quarter of 2025, imports fell by 3%.

Steel-Using Sectors and Production Outlook

In Q1 2025, the Steel Weighted Industrial Production Index (SWIP) recorded a 3.2% decline for the fifth consecutive quarter (previous quarter: -4.6%). Until the end of 2023, EU steel-using sectors showed limited resilience despite the Russia-Ukraine war, overall weak production, and global geopolitical tensions. However, the positive production trend that began after the pandemic continued to decline until Q4 2023, pressured by rising energy costs and component shortages.

High inflation in the EU and the ECB’s interest rate hikes suppressed steel-using sector production throughout 2024. Construction, mechanical engineering, household appliances, and fabricated metal products—particularly automotive—were the most affected by supply chain issues and volatility in global trade.

In 2023, production in steel-using sectors increased by 1.7% (revised from +1.6%), but in 2024 it fell by 3.6% y-o-y (revised from -3.7%). Construction declined by 2%, while automotive dropped by 9.8%. Due to U.S. tariffs and global uncertainties, a moderate recession of -0.7% is expected in 2025 (previous: -0.5%), followed by a limited recovery of +1.8% in 2026.

The report underlines that the recovery of apparent steel consumption in 2025 and 2026 will depend on improvements in industrial outlook, as well as easing global trade and geopolitical tensions.

Conclusions

EU steel-using sectors contracted in 2024 due to declines in construction and automotive. The 2025–2026 outlook remains overshadowed by a combination of high tariffs, weak manufacturing conditions, geopolitical tensions, and economic challenges. Despite repeated monetary easing in the Eurozone, its effects are unlikely to be felt in the short term.

Production grew by 2.9% in 2022, but SWIP growth slowed to 1.7% in 2023. In 2024, growth in steel-using sectors fell to -3.6% (previous: -3.3%), mainly due to stagnation in construction and automotive.

In 2025, a milder contraction is expected (-0.7%, previous: -0.5%), with automotive production forecast to decline by 4.2% and construction to grow slightly by 0.4%. The construction sector is expected to benefit partially from monetary easing. In 2026, SWIP is projected to grow by a modest 1.8% (previous: +1.3%).

Comments

No comment yet.

Only +plus subscribers can access this content.

SUBSCRIBE now to share your thoughts on the markets and get more comments.
SUBSCRIBE If you already have an account Sign In

Most read news

BENTELER and SMS group modernized the SRM line in Germany with a next-generation automation system

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

CBAM warning from the Turkish iron and steel sector! Default emission values do not align with production realities

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Second attack on the Mobarakeh Steel plant in Iran

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Houthi activities increasing congestion on the Cape of Good Hope route

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Turkey’s scrap imports decreased by 9.1% in February

Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Follow List
Expand
Your watch list is empty

Add your favorite commodities for quick access and don't miss the latest price change news.


There are no news categories you follow
Edit Notification Preferences
E-bulletin subscription
Sign up to receive the latest news and daily iron prices by e-mail and sms
Become a Plus Subscriber Now!
Try it free for 3 days!
Subscribe Now
Neutral Prices
Be informed
Provincial Iron Prices
Comments and Analysis
Subscribe Now