logo
Steel ministry moves SLP in SC to keep its BIS mandate even on intermediate steel products

Steel ministry moves SLP in SC to keep its BIS mandate even on intermediate steel products

Mint4 days ago
New Delhi: The Union steel ministry has moved the Supreme Court against a high court stay order on import curbs on steel that fall short of national standards, highlighting the plight of small businesses amid government's thrust for local manufacturing.
The ministry's special leave petition (SPL) follows a 13 June notification mandating Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) certification for all imported raw material that goes into making steel products.
The notification led to protests by micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) that import cheap raw materials for making steel products, prompting the government to suspend the order until 15 July. In the meanwhile, a petition against the notification by an MSME producer led the Madras High Court to order a stay on it on 13 July.
MSMEs include secondary steel makers who depend largely on steel imports used as inputs in their final steel products, potentially pitting them against the government, whose rationale for imposing a quality control order was to check steel dumping into the country.
The steel ministry, in its SLP filed on 23 July seen by Mint, has requested the apex court to stay the interim order of Madras High Court.
'It is respectfully submitted that the said order was passed at the admission stage without even hearing the stand of the Union of India," the ministry's petition says.
The steel ministry's 13-June notification mandated that in addition to finished steel products, intermediate raw materials such as stainless steel slabs, and hot rolled and cold rolled coils must be BIS-certified for all imports with a bill of lading dated on or before 16 June.
On 11 July, the ministry exempted the mandatory adherence of BIS specifications for raw materials used in final steel product in case of imports, where material have been shipped on or before 15-07-2025.
MSME importers then wrote to the steel ministry asking for the notification to be withdrawn. The QCO, which was notified on 13 June but whose implementation was ordered just three days later, put approximately ₹150 crore of advance payments in jeopardy, according to a letter written by industry body Federation of Associations of Maharashtra (FAM) on 18 June to the steel ministry.
"Importers who placed orders months ago under pre-existing regulations are now facing uncertainty. Shipments already in transit or contracted prior to 16 June are suddenly non-compliant, risking needless financial loss and supply disruption," said the letter.
Subsequently, a writ petition was filed in the Madras High Court by Shree Ramdev Metalex LLP challenging the steel ministry's 13 June notification as being bad in law and contrary to BIS Act, 2016 and the BIS Rules, 2018.
'The domestic steel industry faces QCO and similar regulations should not be there for imports. It's no point to have BIS specifications for hot rolled coils but not for say slabs. Government should address the concerns of certain sections of the industry with respect of BIS specifications separately," said A.S. Firoz, former chief economist at the Economic Research Unit of the ministry of steel.
In June 2025, 0.797 million tonnes (mt) of finished steel were slated for imports under 25,759 such applications, as per the SIMS portal monthly report by the union steel ministry. SIMS stands for Steel Import Monitoring system.
Korea, with a share of 34.6%, followed by China, with a 30.6% share of May 2025 imports, were the top two sources.
The highest share of the imports in June 2025—29.1%—were for the automobile and auto components sector, SIMS data showed.
Chandan Bhansali, president of the Metal & Stainless Steel Merchant's Association (Massma), said the steel ministry's strategy on imports was becoming a hindrance to micro and small businesses.
"The micro and small-scale industries are already suffering from slowing down of economy and these compliances are implemented with an impossible timeline of one working day. The SIMS 2.0 portal in its new avatar is too regressive and implementation has become exactly opposite of 'ease of doing business'."
'Compliance of BIS standards for intermediate product is required to ensure that the finished product is as per quality requirement given by BIS Standards. If this not done, a final product may be sub-standard. It is also to be noted that because of excess capacity and declining consumption in certain countries, there a is big possibility of dumping of substandard steel. As India is the only fast-growing large economy in the world, there is a very high possibility of cheap steel getting pushed into Indian market unless adequate measures are put in place for import of quality steel," a steel ministry spokesperson said in reply to a query mailed by Mint on 27 July. The query was mailed to the spokesperson as well as secretary in the ministry of steel.
The ministry did not respond to questions on the legal action taken by it.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Centre offers ₹1,000 crore to MSMEs for energy efficiency initiatives
Centre offers ₹1,000 crore to MSMEs for energy efficiency initiatives

The Hindu

time5 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Centre offers ₹1,000 crore to MSMEs for energy efficiency initiatives

In a significant move to strengthen the country's MSME sector and promote sustainable industrial practices, the Ministry of Power has launched the Assistance in Deploying Energy Efficient Technologies in Industries and Establishments (ADEETIE) scheme, backed by a ₹1,000 crore Central budget. Launched nationally from Panipat, the scheme is being implemented by the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) and is designed to fast-track the adoption of advanced energy efficient technologies in MSMEs, an economic backbone employing millions and driving innovation across sectors. As part of the national rollout, BEE has appealed to all State Governments to take immediate and focused action in scaling up implementation of the ADEETIE scheme. States have been urged to engage their State Designated Agencies (SDAs) to proactively educate stakeholders, identify eligible clusters, and provide end-to-end support to MSMEs for seamless technology transition. 'ADEETIE is a big boon to the MSME sector,' Akash Tripathi, Additional Secretary in the Ministry of Power and Director General of BEE said. 'We urge all States to capitalise on this opportunity from the very beginning to ensure the scheme's success and maximise benefits for their industries,' he added. Secretary of BEE Milind Deora explained that the MoP has selected five States for implementing the scheme, including Telangana, to promote global energy efficiency technologies in the pharma industry. Apart from Baddi, Madgaon, Ahmedabad and Bidar, Medak has been selected under the ADEETIE scheme for the pharma sector. Of the ₹1,000-crore budget, ₹875 crore is earmarked as interest subvention to ease access to concessional finance for energy efficient upgrades, while ₹50 crore is allocated for implementation and capacity-building. The initiative is expected to leverage total investments of over ₹9,000 crore, including significant lending by MSMEs themselves, media advisor (south) to BEE A. Chandrasekhara Reddy said.

Trump's tariff clouds cast a spreading gloom over export-focused MSME mood
Trump's tariff clouds cast a spreading gloom over export-focused MSME mood

Business Standard

time10 hours ago

  • Business Standard

Trump's tariff clouds cast a spreading gloom over export-focused MSME mood

The Small Industries Development Bank of India, in its third edition of 'MSME Outlook Survey', notes that tariff woes are dampening the mood among micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs). This is despite the Composite MSME Business Confidence Index (M-BCI) for the first quarter (Apr-Jun) of the current financial year rising to 63.75 from 60.82 in the previous round, indicating a favourable business environment for MSMEs. Export turnover improved markedly for the manufacturing sector between Rounds 2 and 3, with 53 per cent of the respondents (exporters) indicating a sequential increase in sales. On a year-on-year basis, the export sales also improved for manufacturing exporters with 57 per cent respondents indicating increase in sales. However, the respondents in the sector appear to have subdued expectations one-year ahead with only 45 per cent expecting a growth from the current levels, possibly indicating the uncertainty on the tariff front. For services enterprises, 51 per cent of the respondents confirmed increased sales vis-à-vis 64 per cent in the previous quarter. The one-year ahead expectations also appear to be relatively subdued with 38 per cent of the respondents expecting an increase in sales. Nevertheless, 51 per cent of the respondents in the service sector expect to retain the sales figures of the last quarter in the quarter a year ahead. 51 per cent of the respondents confirmed increased sales vis-à-vis 64 per cent in the previous quarter Meanwhile, exporting MSMEs have been impacted by US tariff uncertainties. Nearly 40 per cent of the respondents, both in the manufacturing and services sector, have been impacted- directly or indirectly- by the tariff uncertainties. However, nearly a fifth of the manufacturing entities are unsure of the impact of tariff uncertainties. In the case of the services sector, the majority of the respondents, at 53 per cent, have not been impacted by the tariff uncertainties.

India's services exports rise 12% in June 2025, imports 5%: RBI
India's services exports rise 12% in June 2025, imports 5%: RBI

Economic Times

time11 hours ago

  • Economic Times

India's services exports rise 12% in June 2025, imports 5%: RBI

India services exports (Image for representation) India's international trade in services showed notable momentum in June 2025, with both exports and imports registering year-on-year growth, according to data released by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). The value of services exports (receipts) stood at USD 32.11 billion in June 2025, reflecting a 12.0 per cent growth compared to the same month last year. Meanwhile, services' imports (payments) reached USD 15.90 billion, marking a 5.0 per cent rise over June 2024. The June numbers indicate continued strength in India's services sector, particularly in IT, business, and financial services, which form the backbone of the country's export earnings. The export growth in June also follows a consistent trend observed over previous months. In April and May 2025, services exports were recorded at USD 32.84 billion and USD 32.45 billion, registering growth rates of 8.8 per cent and 9.6 per cent, the imports side, the pace of increase accelerated slightly in June. While imports fell by 1.1 per cent year-on-year in May 2025, they rose by 5.0 per cent in June, indicating a possible rebound in demand for foreign professional and technical figures are based on revised data drawn from India's balance of payments statistics and are part of the RBI's monthly release on trade in services. In separate news, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has released sectoral data on the deployment of bank credit, showing a year-on-year (y-o-y) growth of 10.2 per cent in non-food credit as of June 27, 2025. This marks a decline from the 13.8 per cent growth recorded during the same fortnight a year data, collected from 41 select scheduled commercial banks that account for around 95 per cent of total non-food credit, indicates a broad-based moderation in credit expansion across key sectors of the to the agriculture and allied activities sector grew by 6.8 per cent in June 2025, a sharp slowdown compared to 17.4 per cent growth in the same period last year. Similarly, credit to the industrial sector rose by 5.5 per cent, down from 7.7 per cent the previous year. However, within the industrial segment, loans to micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) maintained steady growth, and credit to sub-sectors such as engineering, construction, and textiles showed accelerated services sector saw credit growth moderate to 9.6 per cent from 15.1 per cent last year. This decline was primarily driven by slower credit expansion to non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), although segments like computer software and professional services continued to post robust growth. Personal loans grew by 14.7 per cent year-on-year, down from 16.6 per cent in June 2024. The slowdown was largely due to weaker growth in vehicle loans, credit card dues, and other personal lending.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store