Steel decarbonization efforts need more alignment, experts say

Aligning various methodologies of calculating and reporting greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the steelmaking process has become a challenge in the push towards decarbonization of the industry, but there’s demand for aligning it

Aligning various methodologies of calculating and reporting greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the steelmaking process has become a challenge in the push towards decarbonization of the industry, but there’s demand for aligning it.

“The American steel industry’s leadership on reducing emissions is well-known, but there are often disparate sources and avenues for calculating and reporting,” Kevin Dempsey, American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI) president and chief executive officer, told Fastmarkets. “There is a challenge that different groups calculate these numbers differently. They all use different scopes and so they get different results, and that can lead to comparisons between data collected by two different groups that really aren’t comparable.”

“There are multiple methodologies, frameworks and principles focused on steel decarbonization with inconsistencies in scope boundaries, emissions considered and treatment of off-gases, to name a few,” according to Shivakumar Kuppuswamy, policy and impacts director for ResponsibleSteel, a third-party provider of sustainability standards and certifications. “There has been a growing demand to harmonize, rather than reinvent methodologies, to mitigate this challenge, and the trends indicate greater alignment between different methodologies.”

“Based on what we hear from the steelmakers, there is a desire to not have a proliferation of standards,” Lachlan Wright, manager of climate intelligence from RMI, a nonprofit organization promoting green energy, told Fastmarkets. “There is a general desire to coalesce around one thing and that makes it easier for them, both on the reporting side, and also in terms of developing trust. Every time we talk to a steelmaker, they are interested in how harmonization can occur.”

Wright said he has noticed steel buyers also are increasingly recognizing the gaps among existing systems and the need for alignment.

A Nucor spokesperson told Fastmarkets this week that steel customers would benefit from a single, transparent global standard for steelmaking emissions.

Various Methodologies

In November, Washington-based AISI released its recommendations for GHG emissions calculation guidelines in the steel industry. The guidelines are designed to “provide consistent and comprehensive data across the industry on GHG emissions from steel production, with a focus on product-level disclosures and corporate-level reporting,” according to the association.

The association’s steel production methodology for GHG emissions calculation highlighted that:

  • Calculations should include a comprehensive “cradle-to-gate” scope analogous to Scope 1 (direct emissions), Scope 2 (emissions from energy and raw materials used in production), and upstream raw materials, energy and transportation Scope 3 emissions
  • Calculation of Scope 1 emissions should use the Environmental Protection Agency’s GHG Reporting Rule methodology for US-based facilities, with the addition of those facilities below the reporting threshold of 25,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) per year
  • Emissions from the purchase of electricity should be based on local electricity grid factors and reflect renewable energy instruments in specified instances
  • Emissions should be calculated at the product level for trade, procurement and environmental product declaration purposes, while a company-wide basis should be used for corporate reporting

The recommendations are not intended to be a formal industry standard, according to AISI, but a reinforcement of the efforts made by American and global steel producers and others developing GHG emissions calculation methodologies.

Brandie Sebastian, AISI director of sustainability, explained that while other organizations have rolled out decarbonization programs that establish a calculation approach and a benchmark by which emissions must be compared, AISI is solely setting out the calculation framework for quantifying the emissions without setting or requiring certain benchmarks or thresholds.

“We’re ensuring a more complete upstream emissions accounting, all the way to the product level to capture all the relevant processes in steelmaking,” she added.

In September, ResponsibleSteel launched a new global standard for the steel industry with a focus on responsible sourcing.

The US steel industry is facing potential Scope 3 emissions reporting requirements from the Securities and Exchange Commission, though representatives from the industry have voiced concerns about how the rule could create “perverse” incentives to import feedstock, like pig iron, from overseas producers with high carbon dioxide emissions.

Fastmarkets’ daily steel hot-rolled coil index, fob mill US was calculated at $32.04 per hundredweight ($640.80 per short ton) on Thursday November 17, falling by 64.66% from the $90.67 per cwt calculated on November 17, 2021.

What to read next
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
Fastmarkets has decided to launch a bi-weekly price assessment for Chinese grain-oriented electrical steel (GOES) on Friday April 17. The decision follows a one-month consultation period which ended on April 4. The demand for GOES grew alongside the rapid expansion of industries such as power transmission, energy storage, artificial intelligence (AI) data centers, and electric vehicle (EV) […]
Logistics disruptions, sharply higher freight costs and limited raw materials supply are among the main impacts from the ongoing conflict between the US, Israel and Iran on the Middle East's steel market, Asam Hussain, the chief executive officer of Arabian Gulf Steel Industries (AGSI), told Fastmarkets on Wednesday April 1.
Fastmarkets has corrected its price and rationale for MB-STE-0028 steel hot-rolled coil index domestic, exw Northern Europe and the assessments for MB-STE-0905 green steel base price HRC exw Northern Europe, daily inferred and MB-STE-0912 flat steel reduced carbon emissions, daily inferred, exw Northern Europe, which were published incorrectly on Wednesday April 1.
Fastmarkets has suspended the monthly price assessment for CFR Jebel Ali, UAE, steel sections (light and medium), S235-SS400 amid the escalation of the conflict between the US, Israel and Iran and because relevant pricing data is not immediately available.