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Cameron urges talks on steel crisis with China at G20

Published 02/04/2016, 13:20
© Reuters. File photograph shows Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron welcoming Chinese President Xi Jinping to his official residence at Chequers
TISC
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LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister David Cameron wants Britain and China to work together to tackle over-capacity in the steel industry and that the G20 could be a good forum to address it later in the year, his spokesman said on Saturday.

Cameron, who spoke to Chinese President Xi Jinping during a Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, is trying to salvage Britain's steel industry after Tata Steel (NS:TISC) put its British plants up for sale, putting thousands of jobs at risk.

The government has said it is working to broker a deal with potential buyers after Tata Steel (NS:TISC) sought to end its almost decade-long venture in Britain, which employs 15,000 people but has been hit by high costs and Chinese competition.

Steelmakers in Britain pay some of the highest energy costs and green taxes in the world, but the government says the fundamental problem facing the industry is the collapse in the price of steel, caused by overcapacity in China.

Britain imported 826,000 tonnes of Chinese steel in 2015, up from 361,000 two years earlier, according to the International Steel Statistic bureau.

© Reuters. File photograph shows Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron welcoming Chinese President Xi Jinping to his official residence at Chequers

China said on Friday it would impose import tariffs of up to 46 percent on some steel, including a type of hi-tech steel imported from Japan, South Korea and the European Union.

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