<p>New Delhi: India will impose restrictions on the import of low-ash metallurgical coke, a key steelmaking ingredient, for six months starting January 1, 2025, a government order said on Thursday.</p><p>The move aims to protect domestic producers from rising imports, which have surged by over 61 per cent in the past four years, according to data from the trade ministry.</p><p>The order sets country-specific quotas, limiting imports to 713,583 tonnes for each of the first two quarters of 2025.</p><p>Most imports allowed under the restriction will come from Poland and Colombia.</p>.Gadchiroli to be the next ‘steel city’; district will be Naxal-free in three years: Fadnavis.<p>Import of metallurgical coke with ash content above 18% - generally considered poor quality for steelmaking - remains unrestricted.</p><p>This decision follows an April proposal by the Directorate General of Trade Remedies, an arm of the federal trade ministry, to limit annual imports to 2.85 million metric tons for one year.</p><p>However, leading steelmakers, including JSW Steel and ArcelorMittal Nippon Steel, opposed the move, arguing it could hinder steel production in India, the world's second-largest crude steel producer.</p><p>The government has been consulting the steelmaking industry ahead of the restrictions, Reuters reported in August.</p>
<p>New Delhi: India will impose restrictions on the import of low-ash metallurgical coke, a key steelmaking ingredient, for six months starting January 1, 2025, a government order said on Thursday.</p><p>The move aims to protect domestic producers from rising imports, which have surged by over 61 per cent in the past four years, according to data from the trade ministry.</p><p>The order sets country-specific quotas, limiting imports to 713,583 tonnes for each of the first two quarters of 2025.</p><p>Most imports allowed under the restriction will come from Poland and Colombia.</p>.Gadchiroli to be the next ‘steel city’; district will be Naxal-free in three years: Fadnavis.<p>Import of metallurgical coke with ash content above 18% - generally considered poor quality for steelmaking - remains unrestricted.</p><p>This decision follows an April proposal by the Directorate General of Trade Remedies, an arm of the federal trade ministry, to limit annual imports to 2.85 million metric tons for one year.</p><p>However, leading steelmakers, including JSW Steel and ArcelorMittal Nippon Steel, opposed the move, arguing it could hinder steel production in India, the world's second-largest crude steel producer.</p><p>The government has been consulting the steelmaking industry ahead of the restrictions, Reuters reported in August.</p>