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European Steel in Figures 2025
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European Steel in Figures 2025 is the seventeenth edition of the European Steel Association’s (EUROFER) statistical guide, which covers data up to 2024.
It is the fourth edition that takes fully into account the departure of the United Kingdom from the EU and its internal market. All aggregated data for the EU refer exclusively to EU27, and historical datasets have been adapted accordingly.
The numbers presented in the 2025 edition identify the main trends of the past year through data, and reflect the 'perfect storm' hitting the European steel sector - global overcapacity, unfair trade practices, high energy prices, weak demand, economic uncertainty, decarbonisation challenges, geopolitical tensions as well as new and ongoing conflicts.
We hope that our statistics will be of use for those working within and with the steel industry. We also hope that they can help guiding policymakers both at EU and national level in making the right choices when it comes to policy decisions - especially on trade, climate, energy, raw materials - impacting the industry, in particular regarding the implementation of the Steel and Metals Action Plan and the Clean Industrial Deal.
We wish you a fruitful utilisation of European Steel in Figures 2025.
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Brussels, 25 March 2026 - The European Steel Association (EUROFER) has warned that the latest OECD data released in Paris today confirms a deepening global steel crisis and urged the EU to act swiftly to adopt its new steel trade measure.
The new Waste Shipment Regulation entered into force on 20 May 2024, with most of its provisions—including critical operational requirements—set to apply from 21 May 2026.
Brussels 20 March 2026 - The European Steel Association (EUROFER) welcomes the European Council conclusions adopted 19 March that recognises affordable energy is essential to competitiveness, decarbonisation ambitions and Europe’s industrial future. However, the steel sector warns that unless the response measures are designed and implemented effectively, they risk falling short of delivering both immediate relief and the structural changes needed to protect Europe’s industrial base.