China’s Steel Contraction and the 2026 Global Price Outlook

1. 2025 Performance Overview

In 2025, China’s steel industry underwent a historic contraction, officially ending its “billion-ton era.” Production fell to 960.81 million tons, a 4.4% year-on-year decline and the lowest level since 2018.

 

    • The Catalyst: A protracted real estate crisis stifled domestic demand for “long steel” (rebar/construction), leading manufacturers to pivot toward “flat steel” (HRC/manufacturing).

    • Profitability Paradox: Despite lower volumes, mill profitability actually improved to 54% (up from 36% in 2024), driven by a record 119 million tons in exports that compensated for weak home markets.


2. Strategic Pivot: Quality Over Tonnage

China is aggressively shifting its industrial strategy for the 2026–2030 period. The focus has moved from mass expansion to high-end manufacturing and environmental compliance:

 

    • Rebar vs. Flats: Rebar production plummeted from 23% (2019) to just 13% of the total mix in 2025.

    • Decarbonization: China is targeting a 9% reduction in carbon intensity by the end of 2026, forcing a shift toward Electric Arc Furnaces (EAF) and hydrogen-based metallurgy.

    • Export Licensing: As of January 1, 2026, Beijing has implemented a strict export licensing system for approximately 300 steel products to curb tax evasion and mitigate global trade friction.


3. Conclusion: Impact on Global Steel Prices in 2026

The ripples from China’s 2025 contraction will fundamentally reshape global pricing in 2026. Experts anticipate the following market dynamics:

Factor Impact on 2026 Pricing Justification
Supply-Side Tightening Upward Pressure Beijing’s new export licenses and carbon quotas will limit the “flood” of cheap Chinese steel, creating a global supply floor.
Production Costs Inflationary The shift to EAF and ultra-low emission standards, combined with the EU’s CBAM (Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism) starting in 2026, will raise the cost-basis for “Green Steel.”
Regional Volatility Divergent Trends Prices in Europe and North America are expected to rise due to tariffs and carbon levies, while Southeast Asia may see stability as China continues to prioritize regional exports.
Raw Materials Bearish Lower Chinese steel production is cooling the Iron Ore market. If iron ore prices drop 10% in 2026 as forecasted, it may partially offset rising manufacturing costs.

 While 2025 was the year of “the dip,” 2026 will be the year of price stabilization at a higher equilibrium. The era of ultra-cheap Chinese surplus is coming to an end, replaced by a more regulated, higher-cost, and “greener” global market.