Macsteel reaches agreement with DTIC

Settles safeguard-duty case and secures two-year reprieve.

The Department of Trade, Industry and Competition (DTIC) and Macsteel have reached a legal settlement in a case brought by the steel merchant after government extended the implementation of safeguard duties on hot-rolled coil (HRC) imports in August last year, according to an Engineering News report.

The case was settled in the High Court, in Pretoria on 22 June following an agreement that, once the current 8% safeguard expires in August 2021, there would be a moratorium on the implementation of further safeguard duties on HRC for at least the next two years.

Thereafter application can be made to the International Trade Administration Commission of South Africa (ITAC), which will make its recommendation to the Minister only after a period of public consultation. Safeguard duties, which have been imposed over-and-above base protection of 10%, were initially introduced at a rate of 12% in July 2017, and were designed to taper to 10% in 2018 and then 8% in 2019, before expiring at the end of July 2020.

However, government decided, in 2020, to sustain the 8% safeguard duty, following a request by ArcelorMittal South Africa (AMSA). The decision has been heavily criticised by domestic steel consumers, which have experienced steep price hikes and serious supply disruptions, largely as a result of lockdowns imposed by governments in response to COVID-19.

Macsteel’s application to have the extension declared unlawful was served on Trade, Industry and Competition Minister Ebrahim Patel, as well as the office of the Minister of Finance, ITAC and the Commissioner of the South African Revenue Services (Sars). It also sought reimbursement from Sars for duties paid since the extension was confirmed in August last year. That claim was abandoned as part of the settlement.

Macsteel CEO Mike Benfield described the settlement as a ‘significant victory’ for fabrication businesses and the downstream sector, adding that the safeguard reprieve would also ensure more choice in primary steel at competitive pricing.

“Without the safeguard duty, fabricators will be open to compete on a level playing field and export steel products, boosting the prospects of the sector,” Benfield added.