EU hits Turkey with steel sanctions amid dumping probe

Turkey exported some $3 billion of hot-rolled steel to the EU in 2020. (REUTERS)
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Updated 08 January 2021
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EU hits Turkey with steel sanctions amid dumping probe

  • Move will protect European market as Ankara threatens retaliation
  • The duties will range from 4.8 percent to 7.6 percent

ANKARA: The EU has announced that it will impose tariffs on hot-rolled iron and steel products from Turkey starting on Jan. 8 following an anti-dumping investigation.

Turkey was once the top provider of finished steel products into Europe until the EU introduced safeguards in 2018 to protect manufacturers.

A complaint that was lodged by the European steel association EUROFER on March 31 last year over the low pricing of Turkish hot-rolled coil imports into the EU resulted in a probe that was launched in May.

The complaint contained sufficient evidence of dumping and the resulting economic damage.

A separate anti-subsidy investigation against Turkish iron and steel products is also ongoing.

The new tariffs that were announced by the EU on Turkish products vary between 4.8 percent and 7.6 percent. They will target companies including Erdemir, Isdemir, Colakoglu Metalurji and Borcelik Habas, and will be applied for six months until the investigation concludes.

Istanbul-based Erdemir Group is Turkey’s largest integrated steel producer.

But the higher duties are expected to lower the profit margins of Turkish companies and discourage them from competition in Europe.

According to the complaint, Turkish exporters increased their market share from 2.8 percent to 8.1 percent in 2019 by undercutting established market prices.

Last year, Turkey exported about $3 billion of hot-rolled steel to the EU, according to data from Turkey’s Steel Exporters’ Association.

BACKGROUND

Aydin Sezer, an expert on customs policy, says the European move ‘is not politically motivated and only aims to compensate for Turkish product dumping last year.’

According to Aydin Sezer, an expert on customs policy, the European move is “not politically motivated” and only aims to compensate for Turkish product dumping last year.

“It has technical and judicial basis. It will not prevent foreign trade with European countries, but it will make it more costly and could limit Turkish mill exports to a certain extent,” he told Arab News.

Sezer said that the decision will allow Brussels to discipline Turkish players and protect against potential dumping attempts.

Last May, Turkey informed the World Trade Organization that it could inflict customs duties on steel imports from the EU in retaliation.

Trade authorities in Ankara have yet to release a statement on how Turkey will respond to the EU decision.

In 2018, the US raised tariffs by up to 50 percent on steel imports from Turkey, citing national security reasons, causing major losses for Turkish steel exporters and pushing Ankara to retaliate by applying equal tariffs on some imported products from the US.

Last year, the coronavirus pandemic hit several industrial sectors in Turkey, including the steel sector, which halted production in April, resulting in a sharp drop in the country’s crude steel output. Turkey’s construction sector, normally the largest steel-using industry in the country, is expected to contract further.

Rising EU protectionist measures in Turkey’s main export market have also worsened the domestic steel market outlook.

Turkey’s steel sector, vulnerable to exchange rate fluctuations and variations in global trade patterns, is mainly dependent on steel product exports and normally exports 50 percent of its total output each year.

 


Saudi-French cooperation to localize veterinary vaccine manufacturing

Updated 17 February 2026
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Saudi-French cooperation to localize veterinary vaccine manufacturing

RIYADH: In the presence of sector leaders, the National Livestock and Fisheries Development Program signed a memorandum of understanding with French company Ceva under the patronage of Minister of Environment, Water and Agriculture Abdulrahman bin Abdulmohsen Al-Fadhli, who also chairs the program’s board.

The agreement aims to localize vaccine manufacturing, transfer technology and technical expertise, and expand the industrial and commercial production of veterinary vaccines across the Kingdom.

According to the MoU, the two parties will work to achieve high efficiency in mass production scale-up and establish a clear path for sustainable commercial operation that meets the needs of the local and national market, as well as strengthen the biosecurity and food security system.

The MoU also includes the development and modernization of messenger RNA vaccine technologies, along with joint research and development of a Middle East Respiratory Syndrome vaccine for camels. This involves designing, evaluating, and developing vaccines specifically tailored to combat the virus.

The agreement also covers the development of a rabies vaccine and related solutions, as well as supporting national efforts to control the disease through vaccine provision, capacity building, and the implementation of integrated prevention strategies.

The collaboration between the program and Ceva aims to meet the needs of the poultry vaccine market in the Kingdom, currently estimated at around SR750 million ($199 million).

The company will work to cover approximately 30 percent of this market with an initial investment of around SR250 million.

With continued government support for poultry projects and increased production in the sector, the market is expected to grow at a rate exceeding 10 percent annually, reaching approximately SR1.25 billion by 2030.

The addition of the world’s leading poultry vaccine manufacturer to Biotech Park highlights the program’s key role in developing new industries within the livestock and fisheries sector.

It also highlights the program’s commitment to building international partnerships with global companies, organizations, research centers, and universities to support advanced biotechnology industries and attract high-quality investments. It also seeks to create new economic sectors based on biotechnology, enhance veterinary health security, and support the sustainable economic development of the livestock sector, as well as empower national and emerging companies and provide advanced research and industrial infrastructure.

This will solidify the Kingdom’s position as a global hub for biotechnology industries and the development of national capabilities.

Ceva is the first international partner to join Biotech Park, the future veterinary biotechnology city launched by the program in Dhurma Governorate. The city is the world’s first specialized and fully integrated hub for veterinary biotechnology, serving as a benchmark for sector development and a platform supporting markets across the Kingdom, the Gulf, the Middle East, Africa and beyond.

The signing of Ceva is a significant step, given its position as the world’s leading manufacturer of poultry vaccines and medicines, and one of the most prominent international companies in the field of biotechnology.

The MoU aims to localize the veterinary vaccine industry, ensuring its compatibility with the strains of poultry diseases prevalent in Saudi Arabia. This includes the transfer of technology and technical expertise from Ceva, along with the implementation of specialized training programs to guarantee that manufacturing facilities comply with international Good Manufacturing Practice standards.