Skip to content

Global Climate Reports

'정책분석' 상세보기
Title

[SEI] Competition and climate policy in the steel transition: comparing costs and subsidies in the US and the EU

SEI
Category

Key messages





  • Extensive subsidies are provided for green steelmaking in the US and the EU.




  • Subsidies significantly reduce the cost of green steelmaking.




  • Subsidies can have a larger impact on green steelmaking costs than renewable energy.




  • Green steelmaking subsidies are larger than labour cost differentials.




  • Jurisdictions can both strengthen their own industries and speed up the transition.





Sparks fly as a worker takes a sample of molten iron flowing from a blast furnace at the Thyssenkrupp Steel Europe steelworks in Duisburg, Germany.



Photo: Sean Gallup / Getty Images



The nexus of climate policy and “competitiveness”—how to transition to clean energy while ensuring a competitive economy—is a concern on both sides of the Atlantic. In the United States and the European Union, there has been an attempt to resolve the issue by turning towards green industrial policy and subsidies for low-carbon production, sparking a debate on the merits and risks of a ‘subsidy race’.



In this paper, the authors conduct a transparent and quantified study of how subsidies affect the cost of low-carbon steelmaking as a case of industrial policy in a low-carbon transition. They first map subsidy intervention points across the steel supply chain in the US and the EU, showing how subsidies can cumulate over several segments. Afterwards, they use a bottom-up techno-economic model to quantify and compare subsidies with cost components including raw materials, energy, and labour costs in four hypothetical cases in Ohio, West Virginia, Germany, and Spain. The authors discuss the subsidy regimes and conclude that there is a dilemma between an equal policy playing field and rapid action on climate change.



Read the paper



Open access



SEI authors



Jindan Gong



Research Associate



SEI Headquarters



Björn Nykvist



Team Leader: Energy and Industry Transitions; Senior Research Fellow



SEI Headquarters

File
Sources SEI
View Original URL
'정책분석' 이전글 다음글
Prev [IEA] Electricity 2025
Next [SEI] Illegal deforestation in Mato Grosso: how loopholes in implementing Brazil’s Forest Code endanger the soy sector
TOP