Steelmaking is a truly global industry: steel is produced in all regions of the world under a wide variety of conditions. Each region or country is facing the decarbonisation challenge from a different starting point and with varied access to resources and support.
These regional differences are influenced by many factors, including existing steelmaking capacity. Which low-carbon technologies are viable and when they can be deployed depends on the type, performance, and age of existing assets.
Planned capacity development and target dates for implementation will also impact the technology options that are realistically available. Other aspects, such as availability of energy and raw materials, innovation capability, access to finance, and the policy and regulatory environment, will greatly alter the industry transition pathway in each location.
Today, iron and steel production typically takes place at the same site, however, this might not be the case everywhere in the future. Low-carbon iron could be produced where iron ore and inexpensive low-carbon energy are available and then shipped to another location to produce steel.
From global to regional cost profiles
As the steel industry shifts from globally traded coal to locally priced electricity, regional cost differences will grow.
Affordable electricity will be crucial for global competitiveness.