FerrumFortis
LKAB Names Johan Menckel New CEO To Lead Green Transformation & Rare Earth Ambitions
2025年7月15日星期二
Cabinet Consensus & Concrete Constraints: A Five-Year Fabrication Freeze
On June 17, 2025, Thailand’s Cabinet endorsed a Ministry of Industry draft announcement to extend the nationwide ban on the establishment and expansion of steel bar factories used for concrete reinforcement. This moratorium, now scheduled to remain in effect until January 9, 2030, reflects the government’s attempt to curtail excessive industrial capacity that has long outstripped demand. Originally enacted in 2018, the regulation was due to expire in early 2025 but has been prolonged in response to persistent structural imbalances in the steel sector. By pressing pause on expansion, policymakers seek to protect domestic manufacturers, prevent price suppression, also ensure long-term industrial sustainability.
Production Paradox & Policy Prudence: Curbing Capacity, Calibrating Consumption
Thailand’s domestic steel bar industry has faced a chronic oversupply crisis for more than a decade. According to the Ministry of Industry’s internal review, national production capacity for steel rebar far exceeds actual domestic consumption, resulting in underutilization of facilities, weak pricing power, and diminished returns on investment. Current utilization rates hover between 30–40%, significantly below the economically viable threshold. By restricting new players and halting expansion, the government hopes to tighten the supply-demand equilibrium, stimulate healthier pricing, and revive investment confidence among local operators.
Ecological Equilibrium & Emissions Evasion: Factories Facing Future Filters
Beyond economic rationale, the Cabinet’s move has a clear environmental dimension. Thailand, as a signatory to international climate frameworks, is striving to reach carbon neutrality by 2050 and net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2065. Steel production, particularly in older facilities using outdated blast furnace technology, remains a significant emitter of CO₂. The Federation of Thai Industries, while supporting the moratorium, has recommended that exceptions be granted for companies that aim to upgrade production processes, particularly where the enhancements include energy efficiency, emission reductions, or transition to electric arc furnaces (EAFs) and H₂-based technologies. These allowances aim to balance industrial growth with climate-conscious innovation.
Stakeholder Synchronicity & Socioeconomic Safeguards: Multilateral Mandate in Motion
The Cabinet’s decision came after an extensive public consultation process managed through legal platforms such as www.law.go.th, and agency sites including www.oie.go.th and www.diw.go.th. Government departments, business associations, steel manufacturers, environmental advocates, and members of the public were invited to comment on the draft order. A regulatory impact analysis, conducted in 2022 in compliance with ministerial regulations, revealed broad consensus among key stakeholders, including the Ministry of Commerce, Ministry of Natural Resources & Environment, the National Economic and Social Development Board, and the Board of Investment. All endorsed the continuation of the ban, citing its alignment with national employment, investment, and environmental goals.
Carbon Consciousness & Competitive Continuity: Aligning Siam to Sustainability
The NESDB, in particular, stressed the need to pair the moratorium with a comprehensive roadmap for the development of the steel industry. Recommendations included forecasting future steel demand, defining technological benchmarks, and offering incentives for green upgrades. The NESDB warned that without a shift toward eco-efficient production models, Thai steelmakers could struggle to compete internationally, especially as major global importers begin to impose carbon border adjustment mechanisms. By embracing low-emission smelting technologies, optimizing energy use, and adopting digital emissions monitoring systems, local players could become regional leaders in sustainable steel production.
Industrial Inertia & Investment Impediments: Freezing Expansion, Fueling Foresight
The Cabinet’s directive does not prevent investment in operational enhancement. Factories may undertake renovations to improve environmental compliance, boost energy efficiency, or integrate automation for quality control, so long as these upgrades do not increase overall capacity. This clause was added to support innovation without intensifying oversupply. In effect, Thailand is encouraging a transition from quantity to quality-driven production, where existing plants modernize and focus on value-added steel products for specific infrastructure, energy, and transportation applications.
Domestic Defense & Demand Dynamics: Shielding Siamese Steelmakers
Thailand’s steel bar industry is currently composed of around 30 licensed producers, many of which face intense pressure from low-cost imports, particularly from China, Vietnam, and Turkey. While anti-dumping duties exist in some categories, enforcement remains inconsistent. The extended ban is therefore also viewed as a strategic industrial defense measure, allowing time for domestic firms to enhance competitiveness, form strategic alliances, and tap into new markets in ASEAN, South Asia, and the Middle East. With infrastructure spending in Thailand projected to rise—driven by megaprojects in rail, roads, and housing—domestic producers have a clear incentive to align output with national development priorities.
Legislative Lineage & Long-Term Leverage: Reinforcing Regulatory Rationality
This is the second formal extension of the original 2018 regulation, signaling strong institutional continuity and political will. The Ministry of Industry has indicated that future revisions will incorporate performance-based criteria, potentially allowing flexible capacity increases for manufacturers that demonstrate compliance with ISO 14001, GHG Protocols, or science-based targets. The BOI is also exploring green financing instruments for small and medium-sized steel enterprises seeking to upgrade equipment. The emphasis moving forward will be on embedding sustainability, scalability, and strategy into the DNA of Thailand’s foundational industries.
Key Takeaways:
Thailand’s Cabinet has extended the nationwide ban on expanding or establishing steel rebar factories to 2030, citing oversupply & environmental alignment.
Stakeholders, including the NESDB & FTI, support the move while urging exceptions for upgrades that reduce CO₂ emissions or improve energy efficiency.
The policy allows modernization within existing factories, aiming to position Thailand as a competitive, low-emission steel producer in the region.
FerrumFortis
Steel Stalemate & Structural Sanctions: Siam’s Strategic Supply Suspension
2025年6月18日星期三
Synopsis: - Thailand’s Cabinet has extended the national ban on building or expanding steel bar factories for another five years, through 2030, to combat industrial oversupply and inefficiency. The Ministry of Industry, in coordination with key economic and environmental agencies, is aiming to stabilize domestic steel production and align it with long-term sustainability goals.
