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UK Steel Industry on Verge of Collapse After EU’s Shocking 50% Tariffs!

A radical shake-up of EU trade policy

This week, EU commissioners signed off on unprecedented measures to “reindustrialise Europe” by slapping a 50 percent tariff on all steel imports and cutting tariff-free quotas by 44 percent. For Britain’s steelmakers, who ship 1.9 million tonnes of steel annually to the EU (some 78 percent of UK exports), this amounts to a dramatic gut-punch.

Under the new regime:

The UK steel industry on the brink

Gareth Stace, director-general of UK Steel, warns of “perhaps the biggest crisis the UK steel industry has ever faced.” Combined with sky-high energy prices—Britain has the most expensive industrial electricity among major economies—and a global wave of protectionism, the sector truly teeters on collapse.

Recent blows include:

As EU measures redirect millions of tonnes of cheap Asian steel away from the bloc, Britain risks becoming a dumping ground. Stace warns that, “The probability of the EU’s measures redirecting millions of tonnes of steel towards the UK could be terminal for many of our remaining steel companies.”

Counting the costs of energy and tariffs

British steelmakers face a deadly combination:

Together, these forces have driven margins into the red, left plants underutilised and prompted calls for urgent government intervention.

Government response and calls for action

Industry minister Chris McDonald has pledged to “push the European Commission for urgent clarification” and to protect the critical trade flows between the UK and EU. He points to secured preferential access for UK exporters to the US market and ongoing exploration of “stronger trade measures” to shield domestic steel producers from unfair competition.

Yet, Metal chiefs demand more than diplomatic notes. UK Steel’s leadership insists the government must:

Reindustrialisation versus industry collapse

The EU argues that higher tariffs will revive moribund European steel mills by incentivising on-shore production. But the unintended effect may be to funnel a surge of Asian steel through the UK before it can reach the EU—worsening the plight of British producers.

UK Steel urges a balanced approach: fair competition rules that apply uniformly across the continent, coupled with targeted support for modernising blast furnaces and electric arc furnaces to reduce reliance on volatile gas markets.

Looking beyond protectionism

While immediate emergency measures are needed, industry experts stress that long-term solutions must focus on:

Without these structural reforms, even tariff walls may prove insufficient to safeguard an industry that employs tens of thousands and underpins critical supply chains—from automotive to construction.

High stakes for the UK economy

Steel is a bellwether for heavy industry. Choices made today will ripple across manufacturing, infrastructure projects and export markets. The government’s next steps—whether to secure bespoke EU quotas, introduce domestic levies or accelerate green steel initiatives—will determine if Britain can weather this “biggest threat ever” or if its 200-year steel-making legacy will finally falter.

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