Europe to prohibit imports of iron, steel from Russia

The European Commission announced its fourth package of restrictive measures against trade with Russia on Friday March 11, in response to that country’s invasion of Ukraine

The package included, along with other measures, a ban on imports of iron and steel from Russia.

“Very importantly, we will prohibit the import of key goods in the iron and steel sector from the Russian Federation,” an official release said. “This will hit a central sector of Russia’s system, deprive it of billions [in] export revenues, and ensure that our citizens [in the EU] are not subsidizing [Russian president Vladimir] Putin’s war.”

Details of which specific iron and steel products would be banned were not announced before the story was published.

“I am not touching Russian steel,” one trader in Europe told Fastmarkets on March 14. “Russia is actively looking for somebody to buy its steel but with zero results.”

Russia normally exports pig iron, steel slab and long steel products to European countries.

The country exported 753,958 tonnes of pig iron to EU countries in 2020, according to data from the International Steel Statistics Bureau (ISSB). It also said that slab exports out of Russia to the EU countries reached 1,391,816 tonnes in 2020.

“With these sanctions, we will continue going after [Russia’s] oligarchs, the regime-affiliated elites, their families and prominent business people, which are involved in economic sectors providing a substantial source of revenue to the regime,” EC President Ursula von der Leyen said.

“They are active in the steel industry, they provide military products and technology or they provide financial and investment services,” she continued. “This is another major blow to the economic and logistic base upon which the Kremlin is building the invasion and taking the resources to finance it.”

Europe has imposed several sanctions on Russian entities and individuals since the start of the Ukraine-Russia war on February 24.

To keep up with steel price trends throughout 2022, visit our steel and steel raw materials page.

What to read next
The decision follows a one-month consultation period, which ended on April 6. Please note that Fastmarkets will increase the publication frequency to weekly from what was originally proposed. This frequency change is in line with feedback received during the proposal phase. This frequency change follows changes in Brazil’s import environment, including the introduction of anti-dumping measures […]
Steel markets in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries are facing a growing supply crisis for steel and raw materials after the month-long regional conflict paralyzed shipping.
The Canada HRC hot-rolled price hovered around the C$55-per-ton threshold as market participants reacted with dismay to new US policies that affect the way tariffs are calculated on derivative metals products.
The European Commission published the first-quarter 2026 Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) certificate price on Tuesday April 7, applicable to all CBAM-eligible goods imported into the EU in January-March 2026.
Automakers are expected to play a pivotal role in driving early demand for low and near-zero-emissions flat steel in Europe
Decarbonization has become the defining theme for heavy industry. With the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) now in force and mounting pressure to curb emissions, hard-to-abate sectors such as steel are being pushed to adapt to a lower-carbon economy.