China’s Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) and General Administration of Customs (GACC) have issued Announcement No. 79 of 2025, requiring export licences for approximately 300 steel products starting 1 January 2026. The regulation was officially published on 9 December 2025.

Regulatory Basis and Legal Framework

The announcement is issued under China’s Foreign Trade Law, the Regulation on the Administration of Import and Export of Goods, and the Measures for Export Licence Administration.

It updates the Catalogue of Goods Subject to Export License Administration (2025), adding steel products to the list of goods requiring government-issued export licences.

Steel Products Subject to Export Licence

The regulation covers roughly 300 steel products, including:

  • Raw materials: pig iron, ferroalloys, scrap steel
  • Semi-finished steel: billets, slabs
  • Flat steel products: hot-rolled and cold-rolled coils
  • Long steel products: rods, beams
  • Steel pipes, fittings, and selected stainless steel items

The full product list is included in the official attachment to Announcement No. 79 of 2025.

Reasons for Reintroducing Export Licence Controls

China’s reintroduction of steel export licences, after 16 years, aims to:

  • Manage increasing steel export volumes, which grew over 6% in 2025
  • Address trade frictions and anti-dumping investigations abroad
  • Improve product quality control and traceability for exported steel
  • Promote higher-value, higher-quality steel production

This policy is part of China’s broader strategy to stabilize exports and enhance trade compliance.

Exporter Obligations

To comply with the new requirements, exporters must:

  • Apply for an export licence before shipment
  • Submit a product quality inspection certificate from the manufacturer
  • File applications through provincial/municipal commerce authorities or the MOFCOM Licence Bureau for state-owned enterprises
  • Ensure customs documentation matches the licence information

Non-compliance may result in delayed customs clearance or refusal of export.

Industry Implications and Recommendations

The new licence system is expected to:

  • Moderate low-value steel exports
  • Align exports with global trade norms
  • Encourage production of higher-quality steel

Exporters should review the official product catalogue and prepare licence applications well before 1 January 2026.

Source: China Imposes Steel Export Licences

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