HANOI: Scrap steel imports to Vietnam in the first three months of this year increased sharply compared with last year, up more than 45 percent in volume and 120 percent in turnover, which poses serious environmental threat.
According to the latest statistics of the General Department of Customs, Vietnam imported more than one million tons of scrap steel in Q1, valued at over US$276 million, at the average price of $260 per ton. Average daily scrap steel import reached over 11,000 tons, 1,000 tons higher than the average quantity in 2016.
Scrap steel imported to Vietnam mainly originated from the US, China, Korea, Japan and Taiwan. Most of the imported scrap steel was loaded at the entry ports of Hải Phòng and Sài Gòn and partly transferred through trains running across the northern border provinces of Lào Cai and Lạng Sơn.
Local experts attribute the massive scrap steel imports to the country’s use of outdated technology, under which scrap steel is one of the main components for steel production. This is a low-cost process to make steel; however, only 60-70 percent of the scrap steel can be ultilized; the remaining is removed in the production process.
According to experts, there are different types of scrap steel, adding that construction scrap steel can be fully utilized to produce iron and steel. Meanwhile, scrap steel in the form of components, such as machinery, equipment, spare parts, microchips or boats, must be dismantled before being part of the steel-making process, which causes additional costs of warehousing and poses the risk of environmental pollution.
Only those enterprises that own specialized plants, warehouses and drainage treatment systems are allowed to import scrap steel. By the end of 2016, more than 40 enterprises across 63 provinces and cities nationwide were engaged in the import and recycling of scrap steel, one third of which provided raw materials for steel plants in the country.
According to reports of more than 54 departments of natural resources and environment submitted to the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, many facilities and enterprises recycling and processing scrap steel have yet to fulfill the demand for environmental protection.
Under the Prime Minister’s Decision No 73/2014/QĐ-TTg, there are 36 types of scrap steel allowed to be imported, and all must be recycled and used as raw material for steel production. However, in 2015 and 2016, there were many types of scrap steel unloaded at the ports of Quảng Ninh, Hải Phòng, Đồng Nai and Bà Rịa-Vũng Tàu that were reused without treatment. This poses the risk of Vietnam becoming a landfill for industrial countries.