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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Business -> 
Metal recyclers rush to divert or sell US cargoes
    2018-08-13  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

COPPER fabricators and importers are scrambling to divert or resell cargoes of U.S. copper scrap en route to China after the government hit such imports with a 25-percent duty as the trade row with Washington deepens, sources said.

U.S. scrap metal, waste paper and plastics cargoes arriving in China from Aug. 23 will incur the new levy after China announced last week its final list of tariffs on US$16 billion of U.S. goods. Scrap was not on a draft list released in June.

In the first quarter of the year, there were almost 2,200 cargoes of copper scrap per month sent to China from the United States, according to calculations based on customs data. The average cargo of scrap copper sent to China is about 20 tons.

With less than two weeks before the new tariffs come into effect, China’s imposition of duties threatens to disrupt trade for one of the world’s top metal and scrap consumers, as recyclers rush to find new homes for cargoes to avoid paying new duties.

“Last night I lost sleep,” an executive at a metals recycler with processing yards in Zhejiang Province said. He has several cargoes of U.S. scrap copper due to arrive in Ningbo Port after the deadline or about to load on the U.S. East and West coasts.

“We don’t have a solution yet, but we’re discussing it with the supplier,” he said, adding he was looking for buyers in Japan, South Korea, India and even Europe.

Those importers with stranded cargoes will likely have to offer discounts to attract buyers, sources said.

The penalties are China’s latest blow to the U.S. recycling sector, after China hit aluminum scrap with hefty duties in April as part of the trade dispute.

“The impact will be draconian on both U.S. scrap processors and Chinese consumers,” said Michael Lion, Hong Kong-based president of Lion Consulting Asia and a Chinese metals industry veteran.

Companies such as Sims Metal Management and Nucor Corp.’s scrap subsidiary David J Joseph are major exporters of U.S. scrap to China and elsewhere.

Last year, the United States sold almost US$6 billion worth of scrap commodities to China and was the second-largest supplier of copper scrap.

China’s scrap metal imports dropped by a third in the first half of 2018 to 2.86 million tons, while the country has barely imported waste plastic this year.

An executive with a major scrap metal recycler in Asia said there would likely be a combination of resales, trans-shipments and reluctant payment of the 25-percent tariff.(SD-Agencies)

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