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Sims sets up scrap supply deal with Australian EAF

  • Market: Metals
  • 31/07/25

Global metals recycler Sims is setting itself to shift more of its ferrous scrap domestically after agreeing a non-binding initial agreement for scrap supply with a new electric arc furnace (EAF) venture in Australia.

Sims signed the agreement with Equest Steel, trading under the name Alter Steel, which is in the process of developing a new EAF in Pinkenba, Brisbane.

The EAF is slated to start production in 2028, and the mill will be roughly 1km from Sims' site in the same area.

Sims will supply up to 550,000t of ferrous scrap annually to the EAF, under the agreement, with the global recycler also managing Alter Steel's scrap inventory on a just-in-time basis and providing access to its port and rail infrastructure in Pinkenba.

Both parties will use the initial agreement as a framework for negotiating a binding agreement.

The move follows a similar supply contract signed in August last year by Sims and New Zealand Steel, a wholly-owned BlueScope Steel subsidiary, to supply scrap to its new EAF south of Auckland, New Zealand.

That agreement has a term of five years, with the option to extend by another five years, supplying at least 200,000 t/yr of scrap. Operations at the EAF are expected to begin in early 2026.

Roughly 50pc of Sims' Australia and New Zealand (ANZ) arm's scrap volumes are exported, the recycling company said.

And the potential redirection of 750,000 t/yr of scrap to EAFs in Australia and New Zealand over the coming years would shift a greater share of Sims ANZ's volumes to domestic markets, enhancing efficiency and market resilience, the firm added.

Sims previously reported total sales volumes of 728,000t for its ANZ arm in the first half of its current financial year ending 31 December 2024, a 17.1pc drop on the year. The recycler said the decline was due to weak local and export demand, impacted by the Chinese steel export market.

The supply deals follow a shift in the Australia and New Zealand markets where targeted government policy has looked to develop more green steel production, reflecting a wider global trend.

Sims' share price dipped on the Australian Securities Exchange in trading earlier today, closing 5pc lower at $15.24.


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