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Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas, Arjan van Rooij, Misato Sato, Oliver Sartor , Manuel Haussner, Andrzej Ancygier, Anne Schopp, William Acworth ++++++ Project team

Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

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Page 1: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report

Brussels, 23 July 2014

Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas, Arjan van Rooij, Misato Sato, Oliver Sartor ,

Manuel Haussner, Andrzej Ancygier, Anne Schopp, William Acworth

++++++ Project team

Page 2: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Scope of the project

• Independent, objective research on the evidence of state of industry and

past and current effectiveness of the EU ETS and other instruments for

Energy Intensive Industries

• Combine data analysis, interviews with senior industry managers and

CEOs and workshops

• Assess policy development necessary to advance portfolio of mitigation

opportunities outlined in low-carbon roadmaps whilst maintaining a

sustainable industry

• The study of the steel sector is the second stage of the project, following

a first study on cement.

0

2 2

Page 3: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Outline

1. Present state of the European steel industry

2. Scope for and success with CO2 emission reductions to date

• Production Efficiency

• Break through technologies

• Tailored steel types

3. What is needed to unlock mitigation potentials?

• ETS

• Regulation

4. Broader Perspective

5. Next steps for the study

0

• Efficient steel use

• Recycling

• DRI/EAF process

• Engagement of Consumers

• Innovation policy

Page 4: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Present state of the European steel industry

• In 2013 steel use in the EU still 25% below the pre-crisis

levels

• Steel demand unlikely to return to 2007 tonnage levels

• Closure of significant level of excess capacity required to

achieve adequate profitability

• Profit margins on average below level to justify re-

investment

• Gas prices in EU not competitive with North America.

1

Page 5: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Present state of the European steel industry 1

5

Data: World Steel Association, 2013, Global Steel Statistics; Eurostat Structural Business Statistics

Page 6: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Present state of the steel industry

1

6

Data: Orbis

Page 7: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Scope for CO2 reductions – overview 2

Emissions / t steel

Process related emissions

Illustration B

F /

BO

F

Scra

p (

recy

clin

g)

Iro

n o

re

EAF

1,88 tCO2/t Steel

EU Steel Production

168 Mio. t

Fuel related emissions

4. Substitution/efficient steel use

2. Break through technologies (e.g. CCS)

3. Higher quality / lower weight steel

DRI /EAF

1. E

ner

gy E

ffic

ien

cy o

f p

rod

uct

ion

5.Higher recycling rates

Low-C Electricity

Page 8: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

1- Energy efficiency

• 10-15% Emission reduction potential in Western Europe

• Investment limited by:

• Short pay back requirement (typically 2-4 years, now shorter)

• Low profits and growth prospects of industry

• Financial capacity of industry limited.

2

Page 9: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

2 - Breakthrough technologies pursued with ULCOS 2

• Expectation of climate policy initiated ULCOS project

Why have ULCOS projects stalled?

• CCS-based technologies only viable with permanent carbon pricing regime

• Steel firms not prepared to finance and take whole risk (EC was not prepared to take

risk share under NER 300 facility)

• (Political challenges of CCS in Europe)

R&D Demonstration

(Laboratory)

Pilot plant (small scale)

Pilot plant (large scale)

Commercial Installation

Electrolysis: laboratory scale only, requires C free electricity, very long shot

Top Gas Recovery: pilot plant proven, but €300 mio.

demonstration plan cancelled for lack of suitable funding

HISARNA pilot plant working at Ijmuiden but funding in doubt

for scale-up

CO2 free (power)

20-30% CO2 savings with CCS 60-75%

Page 10: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

3 – Higher value steel products to deliver service

with less weight 2

• Automotive 30-40% savings in body weight over the last 10 years

• Innovative high strength steel & forming techniques (tailored blanks, hydroforming)

• With competitive pressure from alternative materials

• Facilitated by value chain integration & regulatory requirements

• UltraLight Steel Auto Body - private sector initiative 1990s

• To meet fuel efficiency standards lighter components required

• R&D expenditures maintained through crisis period

Page 11: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

4 – More efficient use of steel in finished products

Example buildings:

• Many products made of steel could be 25-30% lighter (technically)

• Steel use in buildings can be saved, for example, by using tailored

shapes, supporting multiple loads with fewer structures, aligning

loads to avoid bending, avoiding over-specification of loads etc.

• But several barriers inhibit change:

• Excess use of steel can be cheaper than using less (e.g. risk of

component failure, higher cost during design, quality control)

• Fragmented value chain

• Existing standards and regulation (e.g. minimum requirements

instead of target requirements)

(Allwood et al 2012)

2

Page 12: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

5 – Recycling of scrap

• Recycled steel has emissions up to 75% below primary steel

• Availability increases with maturity of economy, EU scrap=64%

demand

• EU exports around 20% of its scrap because

• Typically BOF furnaces only use 25% scrap

• EAF can use 100% scrap, but share small outside Spain and Italy

• Global CO2 emissions not influenced – only regional increase

–> no need to constrain scrap-trade

• Recovery rates vary across products

• Cars (almost 100%), steel packaging (74 %), buildings (lower)

–> unlock improvement potential

• Declining quality of scrap due to increasingly complexity of products

–> explore options to improve separation during design & recovery.

2

Page 13: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Switching to DRI/EAF process route 2

• DRI is not economic in EU due to high gas prices

• Combine DRI in North America with EAF in Europe?

• Still valid with methane emissions linked to North American shale gas?

BOFDRI / EAF

CCS (?) - coal

Carbon price

Gas price

CCS (?) - gas

Asssume (i) coal price of ### (ii) new investment

0

2

4

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8

10

12

14

16

18

20

00

20

01

20

02

20

03

20

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10

20

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12

20

13

20

14

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15

20

16

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18

US$

/mB

tu

Japan

Europe

US

Canada

Page 14: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

What is needed to unlock mitigation potentials? 3

15

Steel making

3. Tailored steel types

4. Materials Design

4. New/retrofit Size of structure

4. Tailored shapes

Incentive (ETS)

Regulate process

Building regulation

1. Efficient production

2. Breakthrough steel making tech.

Manu-facturer

Construction industry

Building users End of

life

Funding (C-price in value chain)

5. Recycling Regulate deisgn for easier seperation at recovery

Engage

Label / Engage

Innovation support

C-Price in value chain

Page 15: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

EU ETS

Sufficient carbon price level necessary

• Early EU ETS triggered review of mitigation options / ULCOS

-> Higher carbon price necessary to guide low-carbon choices

Robust leakage protection required for credible carbon price

• Free allowance allocation on historic reference imprecise (some

steel companies selling €100 mln others buying some allowances)

• Uncertainty about level of future free allocation and activity level

requirements

Carbon price needs to be reflected in steel price for consumers

• To create incentives for tailored steel/efficient steel use

• To create commercial perspective for break through technologies

3a

Page 16: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Option 1: Shift to output based allocation (dynamic alloc)

• Simple allocation principle for corporate decisions

• Avoids large surplus allocation / distortions between companies

• Easier to implement than other options starting from existing system

Challenge

• Undermines carbon price signal for tailored steel & efficient use

• Uncertainty about level of future leakage protection

• Either cross-sectoral reduction factor adjusts allocation to cap

• Or, some sectors must „cross subsidize“ other sectors (e.g. extra

allowances taken from auctioning pot)

• Limited credibility of regime of continued funding from other

sectors/public budget for role out of break through technologies

3a

Page 17: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Options 2-4: Reflecting carbon price in product price

Three options that can be used without common global carbon price:

1 Border levelling

Non border levelling:

2. Consumption tax on embodied steel in product

3. Output based allocation & inclusion of consumption in ETS

Common Features:

• Competing commodities need to be included (cement, …)

• Requires clear strategy for use of revenue for climate action

3a

Page 18: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Option 2: Border levelling

• Applying best available technology benchmark to imports&exports:

• Allows for full auctioning and provides full leakage protection

• Incentives and revenue for low carbon options

• Challenge

• Concern about international repercussions;

• Question how far in value chain to apply adjustment:

3a

Primary steel production Intermediary product

Recycled steel

Car

Body, Engine Washing machine

body

Washing machine

Radio

Washing machine controlls

Beems

Border levelling for steel content

Page 19: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Option 3: Consumption tax on embodied steel in products

Tax on all steel bought by Europen consumers (irrespective of origin)

Option A

• Tax based on tracked carbon emissions (with fall back rate)

• Creates full incentives across value chain

Option B

• Tax proportional to steel volume times benchmark rate

• Creates incentives for tailored steel and efficient steel use

Challenge

• Politics of implementing a tax at European level

• Option A: Tracking emissions specific to product&confidentiality?

• Option B: Incentives for efficiency/break-through tech. in production?

3a

Page 20: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Option 4: Combine output based allocation with

inclusion of consumption in ETS

Develop fourth option for leakage exposed sectors in ETS Directive

• Incentives for efficient production from output based benchmark alloc.

• Combined with downstream charge on all steel consumed in Europe

Implementation:

• Steel produced or imported is recorded & transfer traced (tons of steel)

• Charge to climate action trust fund when steel moved to consumption

(steel weight * benchmark * quarter averaged ETS price)

Evaluation:

• Efficient carbon price, no WTO concern

• Administration: Open discussion, learn from existing systems (alc., tobac.)

• What threshold for products covered when imported (as with BTA)?

3a

Page 21: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Regulatory standards

• Use standards, specifications, and regulations to require final products /

buildings with less embedded carbon

• Consider Total Life Cycle Analysis to avoid distortions

• Maximize the collection and recycling of end of life steel scrap

3b

Page 22: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Ensure engagement of consumers

Engage consumers to facilitate innovation / diffusion of new products:

• Labels for carbon footprints to trigger customers’ consciousness

• Ensure life cycle analysis reflects all product phases

• Enhance awareness to improve recycling rates

Create platform for cooperation between steel and construction sector

3c

Page 23: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Catalyze innovation / strategic investment

• For processes: RD&D programme on long term breakthrough

technologies (NER300, EIB, Risk Sharing Finance Facility, H2020):

• Address high cost structure

• Address scale of investment and implied slow innovation speed

• Coordinate with investment cycle of refurbishments

• Ensure risk allocation that facilitates participation

• For bulk products: Enhancing value added / specialisation promising

strategy for steel industry:

• Innovation policy for new products, e.g. with public procurement

3d

Page 24: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

A vision for the steel sector and it‘s customers

• Climate policy can neither resolve nor ignore surplus capacity

• Low-carbon roadmap could become a starting point for industry vision

• Develop joint strategy to unlock portfolio of mitigation options

• Translate roadmap into tangible investment and innovation framework

• Long-term credible leakage protection, carbon price & carbon price

pass through

• Flexibilty under ETS cap avoids controversy about sector target

• Explore complementary regulatory / engagement policies

• Provide public funding and support for innovation

• Innovation & engaging customers strengthens position of EU steel

4

Page 25: Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report€¦ · Carbon Control and Competitiveness Post 2020: The Steel Report Brussels, 23 July 2014 Karsten Neuhoff, Ian Christmas,

Next Steps and the Climate Strategies Programme

• Presentation / consultation of insights from study – July

• Draft report for review - early September

• Publication of final report - October

5