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Steel Scale Stratagem & Scrap Scarcity Shape Sincere Sustainability Standards
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Synopsis: - ResponsibleSteel & LESS aisbl have launched a new policy briefing urging EU policymakers to adopt a realistic, scrap-conscious steel decarbonisation scale that incentivises genuine emission cuts across all production routes, aligning efforts with Europe's climate ambitions.
Scrap-Scarcity Scenarios & Steel Sector’s Salient Sustainability Struggles
On June 5, 2025, ResponsibleSteel & the Low Emission Steel Standard (LESS aisbl) unveiled their policy briefing, The Steel Decarbonisation Scale, marking a pivotal moment in Europe’s green industrial strategy. The report arrives amidst the European Union’s escalating climate goals, which include a 55% reduction in net greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, also net-zero status by 2050. The document warns that current regulatory proposals may fall short if they fail to address the physical & systemic limitations of scrap metal availability, a key component in low-emission steelmaking. According to the study, the overemphasis on recycled scrap may create unintended consequences that stall rather than stimulate meaningful decarbonisation across all steel production methods.
Recycling Realities & Resource Rationalisation Reveal Regulatory Risks
Despite steel boasting one of the highest recycling rates globally, hovering around 85%, the ability of recycled scrap to fully meet global steel demand remains limited. The International Energy Agency estimates that only 32% of current steel demand can be met through recycled inputs. Even by 2050, under aggressive scrap recovery scenarios, only 46% of projected global demand will be met through recycled steel. The long life cycle of steel, often 30–50 years in infrastructure or machinery, restricts the timely return of materials into the economy. This finite scrap supply challenges simplistic carbon labelling or procurement policies that solely reward secondary (scrap-based) steel, ignoring advances in low-emission primary production such as hydrogen-based direct reduced iron (H₂-DRI) or carbon capture-enhanced blast furnaces.
Metrics, Methodologies & Market Mechanisms Mandate Multi-Route Models
Dr. Martin Theuringer, Secretary General of LESS aisbl, champions a science-driven framework: “Scrap is a finite but vital asset. Our proposal establishes an equitable & transparent system that motivates decarbonisation regardless of the production route.” The Steel Decarbonisation Scale, developed by LESS & ResponsibleSteel, introduces a dual-parameter model: emissions intensity (in metric tons of CO₂ per metric ton of steel) is paired with the proportion of recycled vs. primary iron input. This scale is envisioned as a harmonised standard, compatible with international systems like ISO 14404, the World Steel Association’s chain-of-custody protocols, also the Science Based Targets Initiative’s sectoral benchmarks.
Taxonomies, Transparency & Technology-Neutral Transitions Take Centre Stage
Unlike conventional carbon footprinting models, the steel decarbonisation scale adds crucial granularity by recognising input composition. For instance, a product made using 100% scrap but powered by fossil-intensive grids may appear greener under current carbon intensity norms than one made via renewable H₂-DRI from iron ore, a paradox that could misguide green public procurement & private investment decisions. The scale seeks to resolve this by ensuring climate impacts are assessed holistically. Already endorsed by the G7 Climate & Energy Ministers in 2024, this methodology paves the way for the creation of WTO-compliant, technology-neutral product labels that incentivise climate-smart decisions without distorting global trade.
Labels, Lead Markets & Legislative Levers Link Local & Global Landscapes
The European Commission is developing voluntary carbon labelling schemes under the European Steel & Metals Action Plan (ESMAP), which aim to reward greener materials in public tenders & industrial subsidies. However, as ResponsibleSteel CEO Annie Heaton highlights, “A credible label must not become a crude badge for scrap. It must reflect the real-world complexity of the steel value chain.” Heaton believes that incorporating the decarbonisation scale into these labels will empower buyers, from carmakers to construction firms, to reward authentic emissions performance, stimulate innovation, also reduce greenwashing risks. Crucially, such a system aligns not only with climate goals but with Europe’s competitiveness objectives in the global low-carbon materials market.
Financial Frameworks & Futureproofed Factories Fuel Feasible Funding Flows
Integrating the steel decarbonisation scale into green finance instruments can unlock transformative capital. The EU Innovation Fund, Climate Bank Roadmap, also national development agencies are increasingly linking subsidies & loans to sustainability benchmarks. The dual-axis nature of the decarbonisation scale, tracking both carbon intensity & scrap ratio, offers a robust tool for financiers to de-risk investments in breakthrough technologies such as molten oxide electrolysis or carbon capture storage in blast furnace retrofits. It also enables better auditing of Environmental Attribute Certificates, currently being explored by the Greenhouse Gas Protocol & SBTi as mechanisms to credit emissions reductions along the value chain.
Corporate Commitment Catalysts & Climate-Conscious Contracts Create Change
Corporations sourcing steel, such as IKEA, BMW, or Siemens, are facing growing pressure to cut Scope 3 emissions. The briefing encourages them to adopt internal targets for lower-emission steel, join collaborative platforms like SteelZero, also leverage certifications like ResponsibleSteel’s Level 4 (for near-zero steel). Procurement teams are urged to adopt design principles that reduce steel use altogether, while aligning material choices with emerging standards. By doing so, buyers can transform passive sourcing into a proactive decarbonisation lever, signalling market demand that reinforces supply-side innovation.
Policy Pathways & Pan-European Partnerships Promote Pragmatic Progression
The final call-to-action from ResponsibleSteel & LESS urges the European Commission to embed the steel decarbonisation scale into all forthcoming industrial policies, from voluntary labels & green public procurement rules to state aid frameworks. The aim is to ensure that every tonne of steel, whether forged from scrap or ore, carries a climate signal that drives emissions downward, fosters technological diversity, also safeguards European industry’s long-term relevance. In an era where green credentials define market access, the briefing offers a blueprint for turning Europe’s climate ambition into industrial advantage.
Key Takeaways
Only 46% of global steel demand will be met via recycled scrap by 2050, per IEA
ResponsibleSteel & LESS propose a scrap-conscious scale to compare emission intensity
EU policymakers urged to adopt this model across labels, finance tools, also public tenders
