South Korean steel scrap imports continue revival amid higher steel output

July imports of steel scrap to South Korea increased both on a month-on-month and year-on-year basis following another strong month in June, according to data from the Korea International Trade Association.

Steel scrap imports were 462,729 tonnes in July, up 11.9% month on month from June’s 413,567 tonnes and up by 49% year on year from 310,620 tonnes in July 2020.

But a comparatively sluggish start to the year means that over the first seven months of 2021, South Korean scrap imports were still down by 5.5% from the corresponding period in 2002 at 2.57 million tonnes.

The rise in imports in recent months is in line with rising steel production in the country, with South Korea’s steel output in June up 17.3% year on year to 6.0 million tonnes, according to the World Steel Association.

Stronger demand for construction products in the country in the May-July period due to the ramp-up of several building projects led to higher steel and scrap prices, a South Korean mill source told Fastmarkets in July, but demand for scrap has waned in the last few weeks amid a rise in Covid-19 cases in the country. 

Fastmarkets’ weekly price assessment for steel scrap, HMS 1&2 (80:20), deep-sea origin, import, cfr South Korea was $480-490 per tonne cfr on Friday, down $5-10 from $490-495 per tonne one week before.

Korean blast furnace (BF) mills have been particularly active in importing higher grades of Japanese scrap such as heavy scrap (HS) and Shindachi busheling in recent months, with one major mill in the country telling suppliers that ambitious carbon-neutral targets have raised their scrap intake volumes.

Demand for higher-grade materials from BFs in Korea and Japan has led to a huge premium of ¥17,000-18,000 ($155-165) per tonne for Shindachi busheling over H2 scrap in the fob Japan market over recent weeks.

Imports from Japan were 284,192 tonnes in July 2021, down 6.4% month on month from June’s 303,750 tonnes, but up 42.0% from 200,180 tonnes in July 2020.

The rise in scrap demand has also seen South Korea looking to the United States in recent months, targeting supplies of steel scrap from the US West Coast.

South Korea imported 79,627 tonnes of US-origin scrap in July, more than double the 38,633 tonnes tonnes imported in June and up sharply from just 11,245 tonnes in July 2020.

What to read next
Fastmarkets has corrected its MB-IRO-0010, iron ore 62.5% Fe Australia-origin lump ore premium, cfr Qingdao, which was published incorrectly Monday March 23 due to a typographical error.
Fastmarkets has corrected its copper concentrates treatment and refinement charge indices, which were published incorrectly on March 20 2026 due to a technical error.
Technological advances, policy support and downstream decarbonization efforts are accelerating the shift toward lower-emission ferro-alloys in China. The industry, however, continues to grapple with the challenge of securing price premiums for green materials despite significant investments in new smelting technologies and sustainable supply chains.
Fastmarkets has corrected its copper concentrates treatment and refinement charge indices, which were published incorrectly on February 27 2026 due to a backend calculation error. Fastmarkets has also corrected the indices' rationale and all related inferred indices.
The global tungsten market in 2026 is marked by extreme volatility driven by geopolitical tensions, trade disputes, and resource nationalism, especially between China and the US. These dynamics have caused significant supply disruptions and price surges across tungsten products.
In the past year, trade policy has and continues to fuel change and dynamics in the North American steel market. Meanwhile, inflation has remained at or above 2.7% while the Fed Fund rate hovers around 2.64. The consumer continues to bear a growing burden to keep the economy from stalling, as finished goods markets search for their own nadir, stability and potential growth paths.