India’s steel sector is now witnessing one of the most consequential transformations in its post-liberalisation history. The country’s rise as the world’s second-largest steel producer and second-largest steel consumer reflects a structural shift in the Indian economy driven by infrastructure expansion, industrial growth, urbanisation, and strategic policy reforms. Simultaneously, India’s efforts to reduce import dependency, expand specialty steel manufacturing, secure raw material supply chains, and transition towards green steel production indicate the emergence of a new industrial paradigm aligned with the vision of Viksit Bharat 2047.
The evolution of the sector also demonstrates how industrial policy, trade strategy, logistics reform, climate commitments, and technological innovation are converging to build a self-reliant and globally competitive steel ecosystem.
Steel as the Foundation of India’s Economic Transformation
The steel industry occupies a central position in the architecture of modern economic development. Every major industrial sector — infrastructure, construction, railways, shipping, defence, automotive manufacturing, renewable energy, engineering, and urban development — depends heavily on steel availability and pricing stability.
According to the World Steel Association, India has retained its position as the world’s second-largest crude steel producer since 2018. India’s share in global crude steel production has increased from approximately 5.2 percent in 2014 to nearly 7.9 percent in 2024, signalling the country’s expanding role in global industrial supply chains.
India’s finished steel consumption has simultaneously risen from nearly 77 million tonnes in 2014–15 to around 163.7 million tonnes in 2025–26. This extraordinary growth reflects the scale of India’s infrastructure expansion, urban transformation, industrial manufacturing, transport modernisation, and housing demand.
The steel sector’s growth trajectory is closely linked to flagship initiatives such as the National Infrastructure Pipeline, PM GatiShakti, Bharatmala, Sagarmala, Dedicated Freight Corridors, Smart Cities Mission, renewable energy infrastructure, industrial corridors, and defence manufacturing expansion.
The sector is therefore not merely supporting economic growth; it is actively shaping the structural transformation of the Indian economy.
India’s Rise as a Global Steel Power
India’s emergence as a major steel-producing nation represents a significant shift in the global industrial balance. Traditionally dominated by China, Japan, the United States, and European economies, the global steel industry is now witnessing the steady rise of India as a long-term manufacturing power.
India’s crude steel production increased from approximately 89 million tonnes in 2014–15 to 168.4 million tonnes in FY 2025–26. The sector recorded a compounded annual growth rate of nearly 9 percent between FY 2021–22 and FY 2025–26, reflecting strong domestic demand and expanding production capacities.
The rise in finished steel production from 123.2 million tonnes in FY 2022–23 to 160.9 million tonnes in FY 2025–26 further illustrates the acceleration of industrial output. Simultaneously, finished steel consumption touched 163.7 million tonnes, indicating sustained domestic market expansion.
This growth has been supported by broad-based performance across core segments such as hot metal, pig iron, and sponge iron production. Sponge iron output, in particular, has emerged as a strategic advantage for India because the country remains among the world’s leading producers of Direct Reduced Iron (DRI), supported by domestic iron ore resources and expanding secondary steel capacity.
According to assessments by the International Energy Agency, India is expected to account for a substantial share of future global steel demand growth over the next two decades, driven primarily by infrastructure and urbanisation requirements.
Strategic Importance of Steel Self-Reliance
Steel self-reliance has now become a strategic national priority. Global supply chain disruptions during the pandemic, geopolitical instability, trade restrictions, commodity price volatility, and energy crises exposed the vulnerabilities associated with excessive import dependence in critical industrial sectors.
India’s policy direction under Atmanirbhar Bharat seeks to reduce these vulnerabilities by strengthening domestic production capabilities across the steel value chain. The strategic logic is multidimensional.
First, domestic steel capacity ensures uninterrupted infrastructure development and industrial production. Second, it strengthens India’s manufacturing competitiveness by reducing exposure to global price shocks. Third, a strong domestic steel ecosystem supports defence manufacturing, railway expansion, shipbuilding, renewable energy infrastructure, and strategic industrial projects. Fourth, reduced import dependence improves trade balance stability and foreign exchange resilience.
India’s ambition to achieve 500 million tonnes of steel production capacity by 2047 reflects the scale of industrial planning associated with long-term economic transformation.
Trade Competitiveness and Export Expansion
India’s steel trade performance demonstrates the growing competitiveness of domestic producers in global markets.
Steel exports recorded strong growth in FY 2025–26 while imports declined sharply, indicating enhanced domestic capacity and improved industrial competitiveness. Exports of finished steel rose significantly, while imports witnessed a major contraction of nearly 46 percent during the same period.
Countries such as Vietnam, Belgium, and Taiwan emerged among the leading destinations for Indian steel exports, together accounting for a major share of outbound shipments. This trend reflects several structural advantages emerging within the Indian steel industry.
Competitive labour costs, expanding domestic raw material availability, improving logistics infrastructure, policy support mechanisms, and technology upgrades are collectively enhancing India’s export potential.
According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, global steel markets are expected to witness strategic realignment in the coming years due to decarbonisation pressures, carbon border adjustment mechanisms, and supply chain diversification. India’s growing production base positions it advantageously within this changing industrial environment.
Industrial Policy and the Production Linked Incentive Framework
The Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme for specialty steel represents one of the most important industrial policy interventions in India’s steel sector. The specialty steel segment is strategically significant because it supports advanced sectors such as defence, automotive manufacturing, aerospace, electrical equipment, renewable energy systems, railways, and strategic infrastructure.
Launched with a financial outlay of ₹6,322 crore, the PLI framework seeks to strengthen domestic manufacturing capabilities in high-value steel products while reducing dependence on imports. The results achieved so far are substantial.
Investments worth over ₹23,000 crore have already materialised under the scheme, generating nearly 2.4 million tonnes of specialty steel output and creating more than 13,000 direct jobs. Additionally, the establishment of approximately 24 million tonnes of specialty steel capacity demonstrates the scale of industrial expansion underway.
The recently announced PLI 1.2 phase, involving 85 projects across 55 companies with proposed investments exceeding ₹11,800 crore, further strengthens India’s ambition to move up the steel value chain. According to policy experts at the NITI Aayog, specialty steel manufacturing will be critical for India’s transition from commodity-driven industrialisation to technology-intensive manufacturing competitiveness.
Logistics, Infrastructure and Steel Corridors
The competitiveness of the steel sector is increasingly dependent on logistics efficiency and multimodal connectivity. Recognising this reality, the government has prioritised the development of integrated steel zones across major industrial corridors including Kalinganagar, Angul, Rourkela, Jharsuguda, Bhilai, Bokaro, Jamshedpur, Durgapur, Vizag, and Nagarnar.
The integration of more than 2,100 steel units onto the PM GatiShakti digital platform marks a major advancement in data-driven industrial planning. The use of geospatial infrastructure planning improves coordination between railways, ports, highways, industrial zones, and logistics networks.
This approach significantly reduces transportation bottlenecks, lowers logistics costs, and improves supply chain efficiency — factors that are crucial for maintaining global competitiveness in steel exports. The strategic importance of logistics reform is particularly significant because transportation costs account for a substantial proportion of steel pricing structures.
Raw Material Security and Import Reduction
One of the most important dimensions of India’s steel policy is securing long-term raw material availability. India’s heavy dependence on imported coking coal has historically represented a structural vulnerability for the steel industry. The National Steel Policy aims to reduce coking coal import dependence from nearly 85 percent to around 65 percent by 2030–31.
The launch of Mission Coking Coal by the Ministry of Coal seeks to increase domestic coking coal production to approximately 140 million tonnes by FY 2029–30. Similarly, reforms such as reduced customs duties on ferro nickel and molybdenum ores, the Steel Scrap Recycling Policy, safeguard duties on select steel imports, and strengthened Steel Quality Control Orders collectively support domestic industrial resilience.
The “Melt and Pour” rule further reinforces self-reliance by ensuring that steel designated as domestically manufactured undergoes the complete production process within India. These measures collectively strengthen industrial sovereignty while supporting domestic producers against unfair trade practices and dumping pressures.
Green Steel and India’s Decarbonisation Imperative
Perhaps the most transformative aspect of India’s steel policy is the transition towards green steel production. The steel sector globally contributes nearly 7–8 percent of total carbon dioxide emissions, according to the International Energy Agency. Therefore, decarbonising steel production is essential for achieving global climate targets under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Paris Agreement.
India’s commitment to achieving net-zero emissions by 2070 has accelerated policy attention towards low-carbon steel manufacturing pathways. In 2024, India became the first country to formally introduce a Green Steel Taxonomy defining emission thresholds for green steel certification. Steel produced with emission intensity below 2.2 tonnes of CO₂ equivalent per tonne of finished steel qualifies under this framework.
This policy innovation positions India among the global leaders in institutionalising industrial decarbonisation standards. As of March 2026, nearly 89 steel units covering more than 12 million tonnes of production had already received green steel certification.
Hydrogen, Carbon Capture and the Future of Steelmaking
India’s long-term steel decarbonisation strategy increasingly focuses on green hydrogen, renewable energy integration, and carbon capture technologies. The use of green hydrogen in Direct Reduced Iron and blast furnace operations has the potential to significantly reduce coal dependence and carbon intensity. Under the National Green Hydrogen Mission, pilot projects are already underway for hydrogen-based steelmaking applications.
Simultaneously, the Union Budget 2026–27 allocated ₹20,000 crore towards Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) technologies across hard-to-abate sectors including steel. According to the World Economic Forum, green steel technologies will become central to future industrial competitiveness because international markets are increasingly adopting carbon-sensitive trade frameworks. India’s proactive investments in decarbonisation technologies therefore carry both environmental and economic significance.
Artificial Intelligence and Industry 4.0 in Steel Manufacturing
The integration of artificial intelligence and advanced digital technologies is transforming the operational architecture of the steel industry. India’s newly launched AI in Steel Pavilion reflects a strategic shift towards Industry 4.0-enabled manufacturing ecosystems. The platform connects steel producers with AI solution providers, technology firms, research institutions, and start-ups to address operational challenges across mining, logistics, production, safety, sustainability, and quality control.
Globally, AI-driven predictive maintenance, smart energy optimisation, digital twins, autonomous operations, and advanced analytics are becoming central to modern steel manufacturing competitiveness. India’s adoption of AI-based industrial systems will therefore play a critical role in improving productivity, reducing waste, optimising energy consumption, and strengthening export competitiveness.
Challenges Before the Sector
Despite substantial progress, important structural challenges remain. India continues to face high dependence on imported coking coal, rising energy costs, environmental compliance pressures, global price volatility, and technological gaps in advanced steel production.
Decarbonisation pathways also involve major capital expenditure requirements that may create financial pressures for smaller producers. Additionally, global trade barriers linked to carbon emissions could impact export competitiveness unless Indian steel producers accelerate green transitions. The sector must therefore balance three simultaneous priorities: production expansion, international competitiveness, and environmental sustainability.
This requires coordinated policy interventions involving finance, trade, energy, logistics, research, technology transfer, and workforce reskilling. India’s steel sector is undergoing a historic transformation from a traditional heavy industry into a technologically advanced, strategically significant, and environmentally conscious industrial ecosystem.
The rise in production capacity, expanding domestic demand, increasing exports, specialty steel manufacturing growth, logistics modernisation, and green steel initiatives collectively indicate the emergence of a more resilient and self-reliant industrial architecture. Steel is no longer merely a commodity sector; it is becoming a strategic pillar of India’s economic sovereignty, infrastructure expansion, manufacturing competitiveness, and climate transition.
As India advances towards the vision of Viksit Bharat 2047, the steel sector will remain central to the country’s industrial ambitions. The ability to integrate self-reliance, technological innovation, green manufacturing, and global competitiveness will determine whether India can emerge not only as a leading steel producer, but as a defining industrial power of the twenty-first century.