The European Commission steel safeguard measure has been significantly reinforced as part of a broader effort to protect the European Union’s steel industry from mounting global pressures. This revision, which aligns with the EU’s Steel and Metals Action Plan, aims to curb the influx of steel imports and create more favorable conditions for domestic producers. A key change under the updated European Commission steel safeguard measure is the reduction of the liberalisation rate from 1% to 0.1%, limiting the volume of tariff-free steel imports into the EU.

This change is designed to help EU steel manufacturers maintain competitiveness by reducing import saturation in the market. The new rules will also restrict member states from using unused quota volumes allocated to other countries, including those assigned to Russia and Belarus. Further tightening includes the removal of the “carry-over” mechanism for steel product categories experiencing high import levels and weak domestic demand. Previously, this mechanism allowed unused quotas to be carried over to the next quarter, increasing supply and pressuring EU producers.
New import limits and quota changes set to take effect in 2025
The elimination of this provision is expected to ease import competition and stimulate local production. The changes will be implemented in two stages: most adjustments will take effect on 1 April 2025, while the revised liberalisation pace and the carry-over restrictions for certain categories will be enforced from 1 July 2025. These phased modifications are intended to support industry recovery, encourage investment in green steel production, and protect employment across the EU steel sector.
The revised policy follows a formal review requested by 13 EU Member States, which concluded that the sector faces deteriorating conditions due to global overcapacity, rising exports from China, and escalating trade barriers in major markets such as the United States. The findings led to the European Commission’s decision to recalibrate the safeguard measure to better address the industry’s current challenges. The duration of the safeguard remains unchanged and is set to expire on 30 June 2026.
Introduced in 2019, the measure was originally aimed at protecting EU steel producers from trade diversion and increasing import volumes following global shifts in trade patterns. This latest adjustment is one of several reviews conducted by the European Commission to ensure the safeguard measure remains aligned with evolving market realities. It underscores the EU’s continued commitment to preserving a resilient, competitive, and sustainable steel industry. – By EuroWire News Desk.
