Business news from Ukraine

UKRAINE PASSES BILL TO EXTEND EXPORT DUTY OF EUR 58 PER TONNE ON SCRAP METAL

28 April , 2021  

The Verkhovna Rada adopted at the final reading bill on amendments to Section II Final and Transitional Provisions of the Law of Ukraine on amendments to certain laws of Ukraine concerning reducing the shortage of ferrous scrap on the domestic market, which is proposed to prolong the export duty in the amount of EUR 58 per tonne for another five years.
Some 291 MPs backed the bill at a parliamentary session on Tuesday.
One of the authors of bill No. 5175, Deputy Head of the Verkhovna Rada Committee for Economic Development Dmytro Kysylevsky, in his Facebook post, expressed his satisfaction with the adoption of the bill.
At the same time, he recalled that the duty was first introduced in 2016 to moderate the export of scarce raw materials from Ukraine. The metallurgical industry, which provides 10% of the national GDP, 35% of merchandise exports and 200,000 jobs, cannot work without it. After all, there is no technology that allows getting steel without using scrap metal.
“As the deputy head of the parliamentary committee for economic development, I understand that only the export of products with high added value will allow us to become a strong and rich country. In this case, 1 tonne of exported scrap gives Ukraine a little less than UAH 2,000 (this is the payment of the EUR 58 duty), while 1 tonne of the same scrap processed into finished steel products at Ukrainian steel plants brings about UAH 8,000 in taxes. That is, it is four times more profitable for the state to process scrap into metal and then into finished products than to export raw materials,” the parliamentarian said.
According to him, in this case there is no question of choice: to export raw materials or processed products with added value. At the same time, he said that if the initiative to extend the duty did not receive the necessary support from MPs, then 21,000 jobs and about UAH 1 billion of taxes per year would be lost for the Ukrainian state.
“And, of course, we need to think about the future. The EU Green Deal further increases the value of scrap as a raw material for metallurgy: its use in electric arc furnaces reduces CO2 emissions by up to 90% compared to conventional technologies of steel production in converters and open-hearth furnaces. And since Ukraine undertakes to reduce CO2 emissions, it is necessary to take care of the resources for this, as other countries are already doing,” Kysylevsky said, adding that the European metallurgical association Eurofer generally demands to ban the export of scrap metal from the EU, taking into account the EU Green Deal.
“At the same time, I want to reassure the skeptics: the bill does not contradict our international obligations. This is a temporary measure that is not discriminatory. It complies with the WTO law on security exceptions: we have a war, a chronic trade deficit, Crimea is annexed. International partners understand this. Therefore, no claims were made against Ukraine during the period of the duty since 2016. And now official Kyiv has a confident negotiating position in the WTO,” the MP said.

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