City
Epaper

China cuts down magnesium production, disrupts Europe's car industry

By ANI | Updated: November 3, 2021 05:05 IST

China has built a monopoly on the global supply of magnesium in the last two decades and they have managed to overcome their European rivals by engaging in large-scale dumping.

Open in App

China has built a monopoly on the global supply of magnesium in the last two decades and they have managed to overcome their European rivals by engaging in large-scale dumping.

POREG (Policy Research Group) reported that China that manufactures more than 95 per cent of Europe's magnesium requirements, has cut back on production leading to considerable disquiet in the European Union (EU), as magnesium is vital to sectors such as cars, aircraft, and electronics.

At the recent EU leaders' summit (Oct 21-22, 2021) both Angela Merkel, the outgoing German Chancellor and Andrej Babis, Czech Prime Minister raised the issue, on the heels of the crisis of semi-conductors in Europe.

Both Germany and Italy are Europe's leading car manufacturers and their concern about the knock-on effect on car production is but natural. While Chancellor Merkel pointed to the impact on the cost of production of cars, the Czech PM was even more blunt when he said the sector was facing a 'disaster', reported POREG.

China has cut back production because of the nationwide energy shortages. Other producing nations like Russia and Israel find it difficult to fill the shortfall, as China is by far the world's largest producer.

The dependence on China is an embarrassment to the EU at this juncture as it attempts to balance relations with China while trying to break free of its supply chains.

Global Times reported (24 October 2021) that while many businesses had resumed production and trading, hurdles and restrictions continued to limit output and could result in a 10 per cent drop in exports of magnesium.

According to a joint statement issued by a dozen EU industry groups, magnesium stocks now risk running out by the end of this month (Nov 2021). With Chinese factories partially closed due to the nationwide energy crisis and exports of magnesium falling rapidly, Europe faces a real challenge. The joint statement warned about "far-reaching ramifications on entire European Union value chains," and added that the construction and packaging industries are also feeling the heat, reported POREG.

If not resolved immediately thousands of businesses across Europe could be threatened to impact their entire supply chains and jobs that rely on them. The industry bodies have therefore called for urgent action by the EU. There are few guarantees that China will immediately respond or provide long-term assurances, reported POREG.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: State Bank of IndiaAngela MerkelGlobal TimesChinese global times
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalChina Blast: Death toll rises to 7 in Yanjiao gas explosion; 27 injured

InternationalBomb Explosion: 1 dead, 22 injured in Yanjiao town

InternationalChina Blast: Explosion at Restaurant in Yanjiao Damages Multiple Buildings and Vehicles; Video Surfaces

TechnologyHonor announces global launch of 'Honor 90' series

InternationalSouth Africa: 24 dead in Boksburg following suspected gas inhalation

International Realted Stories

InternationalIndia & France to sign deal for Rafale fighter jets for Navy tomorrow

InternationalUK Foreign Secy Lammy, EAM Jaishankar discuss terror attack in J-K

InternationalColorado Nightclub Raid: Over 100 Illegal Immigrants Detain at Underground Nightclub in US; Video Surfaces

InternationalAttack on humanity: Indian origin Norwegian MP Himanshu Gulati on Pahalgam

InternationalFlour supplies in Gaza depleted: UN agency