+86-156-2511-0166[email protected]WhatsApp
Hanheng Refractory
HOMEABOUT
PRODUCTS
All products
APPLICATIONS & INDUSTRIESMARKET SUPPORTNEWS
DISCUSS
Hanheng Refractory
HOMEABOUTAPPLICATIONS & INDUSTRIESMARKET SUPPORTNEWS
DISCUSS
+86-156-2511-0166WhatsApp[email protected]
Hanheng RefractoryHanheng RefractoryBuilt for heat. Proven in delivery.

Hanheng Refractory Materials Co., Ltd. supplies shaped bricks, monolithic refractories, tundish materials, and insulation products for steel, ferroalloy, glass, boiler, and other heat-intensive operations.

Quick links

  • Home
  • About
  • Products
  • Applications & Industries
  • Market Support
  • News

Core products

  • Magnesia-Carbon Brick
  • Alumina-Magnesia-Carbon Brick
  • Magnesia-Alumina-Carbon Brick
  • Al2O3-SiC-C Brick
  • Calcium-Magnesium-Carbon Brick

Contact

Panpan Road, Zhanqian District, Yingkou, Liaoning, Chinawww.hanhengref.com[email protected]+86-156-2511-0166WhatsApp

© 2026 Hanheng Refractory

Project discussionProduct systemPrivacy Policy
Industry update
Published May 10, 2026cementeconomyenergy

Steel at a Crossroads: Policy Will Decide South Africa’s Future - South African Iron and Steel Institute

South Africa’s steel industry faces structural decline driven by imports, lost capacity, and policy gaps. Urgent, coordinated intervention is needed to restore competitiveness, resilience, and long term sustainability.

Source-backed market reading focused on the local industrial developments, project signals, and operating consequences that are actually worth tracking.

Read Article
Previous article

South Africa’s steel industry is no longer in a cyclical slump; it is at a structural turning point. February 2026 crude steel output fell 17.2% year‑on‑year to 312,900 tonnes, reflecting not only weak demand but also lost capacity, rising import penetration, and policy misalignment.

While remaining producers have lifted utilisation, the gap left by mill closures remains unfilled a stark reminder that once capacity is lost, it is rarely recovered quickly. Imports Are Displacing, Not Supplementing The old narrative that imports “supplement” domestic supply no longer holds.

SARS data shows January 2026 primary steel imports surged 21% year‑on‑year to 154,681 tonnes. Semi‑finished products rose 55%, long products 151%, and hot‑rolled coil 74%, with nearly 80% of coil imports originating from South Korea, exploiting exemptions to bypass safeguard duties.

These inflows are not filling gaps; they are eroding local production, undermining pricing, and threatening industrial viability. Recent anti‑dumping actions by the International Trade Administration Commission are welcome, but partial or delayed interventions risk accelerating structural decline.

Trade remedies must be comprehensive, timely, and rigorously enforced. Without decisive action, circumvention and diversion will continue to hollow out domestic capability. Passive Deindustrialisation Is a Strategic Risk Steel is not just another commodity it underpins infrastructure, energy, and manufacturing.

Allowing the sector to erode is a policy choice with profound consequences. Import‑dependent construction of transmission lines, renewable energy projects, or industrial corridors exposes South Africa to cost volatility, supply insecurity, and strategic vulnerability.

The infrastructure pipeline represents demand opportunity. But without firm localisation requirements, infrastructure expansion risks deepening import dependence instead of rebuilding domestic capacity. The window is narrow. Policy alignment is urgent. South Africa’s steel sector will not recover through market forces alone.

It requires deliberate, coordinated policy. The choice is clear: bold intervention can restore resilience, while inaction guarantees gradual erosion. The real question is not whether South Africa can afford to support steel, but whether it can afford not to.

Next article

Sources and reading line

Official releases and public references behind the argument in this article.

Evidence line
Published source

Steel at a Crossroads: Policy Will Decide South Africa’s Future - South African Iron and Steel Institute

Source: SAISI South Africa Steel Feed

Open source↗
Support note

Steel at a Crossroads: Policy Will Decide South Africa’s Future - South African Iron and Steel Institute

Published source

Document: SAISI South Africa Steel Feed · Source: SAISI South Africa Steel Feed

Continue from here

Continue this article into market review, product systems, and project preparation.

When this signal is already affecting your buying sequence, continue from here into the related market page, product route, or a practical project discussion.

Related market pages

Continue into the country page when destination documents, packing, and delivery timing need a deeper read.

Africa Regional Project SupportOpen market page
Related product systems

Continue into the product systems that are most likely to appear in the same procurement discussion.

Alumina-Magnesia-Carbon BrickReview productCalcium-Magnesium-Carbon BrickReview productBasic Ramming Mass for Induction Furnace Working LiningReview product
Project preparation

Share the unit, duty position, target campaign, destination market, and document questions so the next reply can stay practical.

Unit name, exact hot-zone position, and current lining route

Target campaign, shutdown or commissioning window, and expected quantity split

Destination market, delivery route, and the document set needed before quotation

Discuss this articleBack to News