A report released by The World Steel Association, which groups 170 steel producers, said global use should rise to 1.475 billion tons, up up 3.1 per cent following growth of two per cent last year.
It forecast a 3.3. Per cent expansion to 1.52 billion tonnes in 2014.
"Major emerging economies, particularly India and Brazil, have not performed as hoped mainly due to key structural issues. These factors have led to a lower steel demand performance than predicted across the world, with China being the one exception," Jurgen Kerkhoff, chairman of the Worldsteel Economics Committee, said yesterday.
"The industry is going through a very difficult phase," Association director general Edwin Basson told AFP.
"Demand in many parts of the world has grown much slower than anticipated and at the same time we see that output conditions, in terms of productivity, are also difficult in many parts of the world," he added.
According to industry data, steel demand in China will grow six per cent this year, but only three per cent in 2014. In the United States, demand will rise only 0.7 per cent this year after a 7.8 per cent growth last year.
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