Steel industry in Taiwan
The steel industry in Taiwan is a crucial pillar of the nation's heavy industry sector, serving both domestic infrastructure development and global export markets. As of 2024, Taiwan ranked among the top thirteen steel exporters worldwide, with steady growth in export volume, production capacity, and technological innovation.[1] The industry encompasses multiple large-scale integrated mills, electric-arc furnace (EAF) producers, and specialized alloy manufacturers.
History
The modern Taiwanese steel industry began taking shape during Japanese rule, with Taiwan’s oldest steel company, Tang Eng Iron Works, founded in 1940 in Kaohsiung.[2] Following the government's postwar industrialization drive, the state-backed China Steel Corporation (CSC) was established in 1971, launching the island’s first integrated blast furnace in 1977 and completing expansions through the 1980s.[3] The industry later diversified in the 1990s with private players like An Feng Steel (founded 1986), Taiwan Steel Group, and specialty alloy-maker Gloria Material Technology Corp. entering the market.[4]
Electric-arc furnace producers, including Tung Ho Steel and Yieh Loong, gained prominence from the late 1990s onwards. These focused on producing rebar and construction-grade steel while promoting resource-efficient and lower-emission practices.[5]
Production, capacity and employment
The industry contributes significantly to Taiwan’s GDP through exports, infrastructure projects, and value-added processing, alongside downstream sectors like machine tools and construction. China Steel Corporation remains Taiwan's largest steel producer, with an annual crude-steel capacity of approximately 10 million tonnes in 2024.[6] EAF producers like Tung Ho, TSG affiliates, An Feng and Yieh Loong add several million tonnes more, pushing Taiwan's total annual crude-steel output well beyond 19 million tonnes in 2024, ranking the country as the thirteenth highest in the world.[7] The domestic industry employs tens of thousands of workers directly, with thousands more in related machining and processing sectors. It is estimated that more than 90,000 workers are employed in the steel production industry in Taiwan.[8]
Trade and exports
Taiwan, as of 2017, is the world's thirteenth-largest steel exporter. In 2018, Taiwan exported 12.2 million metric tons of steel, a one percent increase from 12.0 million metric tons in 2017. Taiwan's exports represented about 3 percent of all steel exported globally in 2017, based on available data. The volume of Taiwan's 2018 steel exports was one-sixth that of the world's largest exporter, China, and nearly one-third that of the second-largest exporter, Japan. In value terms, steel represented just 3.6 percent of the total amount of goods Taiwan exported in 2018. Taiwan exports steel to more than 130 countries and territories. Over the decade from 2009 to 2019, Taiwan grew its steel exports by 24%.[9] In 2018, the US imported 300,000 metric tons of pipe and tube products. Taiwan has developed a vast export trade to its most proximate neighbours in flat products. Taiwan's stainless steel exports numbered 2018 about 500,000 metric tons.[10] In value terms, steel comprised around 3.6% of Taiwan's total exports in 2018.
Innovation, sustainability and recycling
Taiwanese steel firms have led in urban mining—recycling industrial and electronic waste into high-quality steel and specialty metals. China Steel Corporation's partners like Tung Ho, along with Solar Applied Materials Technology, reclaim materials such as zinc, copper, gallium, and indium from scrap and industrial by-products, cutting raw material dependency, carbon emissions, and hazardous waste.[11] Tung Ho's leadership in forming the Taiwan Steel Union with competitors for joint scrap processing has made it one of the leading urban mining operations globally, recycling tens of thousands of tonnes annually and reducing carbon dioxide emissions.[12][13]
Challenges
Despite achievements, Taiwan’s steel sector faces challenges including global overcapacity, international competition from lower-cost producers, volatile raw material prices, and shifts in trade policies.[14][15] Compliance pressures on environmental impact, especially from blast furnace operations, have prompted consolidation and modernization to improve emissions performance and process efficiency.[16][17]
List of companies in Taiwan
See also
- History of the steel industry (1850–1970)
- History of the steel industry (1970–present)
- List of countries by steel production
- List of steel producers
- Steel mill
References
- ^ "Total production of crude steel World total 2024". World Steel Association. Retrieved 26 January 2025.
- ^ "戰後台灣鋼鐵界龍頭「唐榮鐵工廠」,隨時代變遷見證國營企業民營化歷程" (in Chinese (Taiwan)). The News Lens. 27 February 2022. Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ 李振麟 (31 March 2025). "台灣鋼鐵產業的發展與因應之道" (in Chinese (Taiwan)). United Daily News. Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ 高雄好過日 (11 June 2019). "高雄成為臺灣的「鋼鐵之都」,絕非只從十大建設的中鋼開始". Story Studio (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ Liu, Kwangyin (29 November 2024). "From Cable Giant to Global Stainless Steel Leader: Walsin Lihwa's Transformation". CommonWealth Magazine (Taiwan). Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ 曹悅華 (20 November 2024). "中鋼今年獲利可望勝去年!但中國每年兩億噸鋼鐵待消化、東南亞又新增產量...新董座將如何應戰?" (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Business Today. Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ "December 2024 crude steel production and 2024 global crude steel production totals". World Steel Association. 24 January 2025. Retrieved 26 January 2025.
- ^ "Establishment of the Guidance Technology for Occupational Safety and Health in the Iron and Steel Industry" (PDF) (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Institute of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health, Ministry of Labor (Taiwan). April 2013. Retrieved 26 January 2025.
- ^ 陳建宇 (21 November 2024). "國內鋼材出口量 逐年下滑" (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Commercial Times. Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ "Global Steel Trade Monitor - Steel Exports Report: Taiwan" (PDF). US Department of Commerce. International Trade Administration. May 2019. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 June 2017. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
- ^ Sedaghat, Lillygol; Hamada, Cory (26 April 2024). "Why Taiwan Is Becoming a Leader in Urban Mining". Time (magazine). Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ Singh, Naina (16 January 2024). "The growing promise of urban mining in Taiwan industry". CommonWealth Magazine (Taiwan). Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ Chen, Wei-han (16 February 2016). "FEATURE: 'Urban mining' is an eco-friendly gold mine". Taipei Times. Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ 李明融 (20 January 2025). "鋼鐵變「慘業」...美CEO批日本是元兇!謝金河揭原因:中國傾銷所致" (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Formosa Television. Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ 謝金河 (21 January 2025). "鋼鐵股變「慘業」 他批日是元兇、教會陸傾銷、產能過剩…謝金河:內捲全球化今年顯學" (in Chinese (Taiwan)). United Daily News. Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ 林菁樺 (3 November 2024). "對抗中國倒產能 鋼鐵業拚轉型、提反傾銷" (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Liberty Times. Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ 何秀玲 (30 October 2024). "中鋼黃建智接任台灣鋼鐵公會理事長 聚焦供應鏈轉型" (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Central News Agency (Taiwan). Retrieved 4 June 2025.