The UK – Viet Nam Free Trade Agreement (UKFTA) was providing significant opportunities for Viet Nam to expand the export of steel and iron products in the UK.
The deal also enhances cooperation with the UK in accelerating the decarbonisation process of the iron and steel industry as Viet Nam was striving to achieve net zero by 2050.
Nguyen Canh Cuong, Trade Counsellor at Viet Nam’s Embassy to the UK, in an interview with Viet Nam News, said that high-grate steel production using decarbonisation technology was a potential industry in which the two countries could strengthen cooperation. The decarbonisation technology allowed lower power consumption and carbon emissions than traditional production.
Since the UKVFTA came into effect on May 1, 2021, Viet Nam’s export of steel and iron products saw a dramatic rise in the context that the UK increased the investigation and application of trade remedies on steel and iron products originating from several other countries.
Statistics of the Ministry of Industry and Trade showed that steel and iron exports of Viet Nam to the UK increased by 1,269 per cent in 2021 over the previous year, one among the fastest growing exports to the UK besides vegetables (82 per cent), pepper (49 per cent), rattan products (56 per cent) and ceramics (32 per cent).
Customs statistics showed that the export of iron and steel products to the UK totalled nearly 419,000 tonnes in 2021, worth more than US$491 million, compared to the volume of just 51,851 tonnes and the export value of $35.88 million recorded in 2020.
Iron and steel products exported to the UK saw rapid growth after the trade deal was put into effect. In the period from January 1 to April 30, 2021 before the trade deal came into force, the iron and steel exports to the UK was just 32,000 tonnes worth more than $38 million.
The UK Department for International Trade revealed that iron and steel was one among the top five goods imported to the UK from Viet Nam in the four quarters to the end of the first quarter of 2022 with a revenue of £336.8 million ($390 million) or 7.2 per cent of all UK goods imported from Viet Nam.
Other products in the top five included telecoms and sound equipment (£1.4 billion or 29.7 per cent), clothing (£1.4 billion or 29.7 per cent), footwear (£334.8 million or 7.1 per cent) and furniture (£329.9 million or 7 per cent).
According to the Viet Nam Steel Association, steel and iron products of Viet Nam were mainly exported to ASEAN, the US and China while the export to the UK remained modest. The UK imports of iron and steel totalled $7.33 billion in 2021, statistics of the United Nations Comtrade database on international trade showed.
Thus, there was still significant room to promote the exportation of steel and iron products to the UK, especially if steel makers could grab the opportunities arising from the UKVFTA, the association said.
The association pointed out that the steel industry of Viet Nam had been witnessing a dramatic change in the structure of export markets since 2021, with exports to major markets like ASEAN and China seeing drops while exports to the US, EU and the UK increased rapidly.
Impressive increases in steel and iron exports to the US, the EU and the UK contributed to allowing steel to enter the club of goods with export turnover of $10 billion or higher last year. Steel exports hit the milestone of $10.8 billion in November 2021 and became the product with the fastest growth rate in export, up 129.8 per cent over the same period last year.
Although steel exports slumped from the beginning of this year on weak global demand, the UK and the EU which had free trade deals with Viet Nam, remain spotlight markets.
The latest updates from the General Department of Customs showed that the UK imported nearly 83,500 tonnes of steel and iron, worth $116.4 million in the first seven months of this year. Steel exports to the EU was estimated at 1.1 million tonnes, up 18.1 per cent in the period.
According to Viet Nam Steel Association, in the context of increasing protectionism, diversifying export markets is vital for the domestic steel industry, in which, the free trade deals like the UKVFTA are providing significant opportunities to expand exports.
However, it is necessary for Vietnamese steel makers to improve technology and renovate production and business methods to be able to expand exports in the UK and the EU which had high requirements for product quality, the association said.
Renovating steel production technology is needed to reduce impacts on the environment and increase exports sustainably. — VNA/VNS Photo Duc Dung
Technology renovation
The Ministry of Industry and Trade in a report to the Government about the proposal to develop a strategy for the steel industry to 2030 with a vision to 2050 pointed out that the competitiveness of the steel industry remains low with heavy dependence on imported materials, together with small production capacity, outdated equipment and technology which are causing energy waste and posing risks to the environment.
The ministry proposed policies be raised to build a strong steel industry which is important to promote the country’s development toward industrialisation and modernisation, including policies to encourage renovations in steel production technology.
Green steel, or the manufacturing of steel without the use of fossil fuels, is becoming a trend in the world as the net zero target by 2050 is putting the steel industry under pressure to act.
The steel industry was one of the biggest CO2 emitters. Wordsteel's statistics showed that today, worldwide, on average 1.85 tonnes of CO2 are emitted for every tonne of steel.
Viet Nam should consider moving toward green steel to increase exports sustainably and reduce impacts on the environment if the country is to meet the net zero carbon emissions target by 2050, the steel association said.
Cuong from the Viet Nam’s Embassy to the UKstressed that Viet Nam could enhance cooperation with the UK in promoting the decarbonisation of the steel industry. — VNS