Turkey already has 187,359t of rebar — or 62.1pc of its quota for the year — awaiting allocation for import into the EU, just two days after the quotas opened for the 2019-20 year.
Similarly, 165,962t of wire rod (53.2pc of its annual quota) is waiting to clear customs.
The "total awaiting allocation" figure refers to drawing requests received by the European Commission for this tariff quota but not yet allocated. At present Turkish material is subject to extensive scrutiny so may take longer to clear customs, a market participant said.
The Turkey quota of 312,081t or wire rod and 301,537t of rebar opened on 1 July and will be renewed again on 1 July 2020. The only other opportunity for Turkey to import more product after it exhausts its quota is when the "other countries" quota opens on 1 April 2020, providing this has not already been exhausted by other importers.
Switzerland, Ukraine, Belarus and Moldova did not exhaust their country-specific wire rod quotas by the June 30 deadline, but their total quota allowances still increased by 5pc.
"The 5pc rise in the quota was programmed into the regulation that implemented the EU safeguard measures. However, there is an ongoing review that should take into account the changed market situation. The 5pc increase has not been removed despite the damage caused by surging imports and means the Commission has ignored the industry's legitimate concerns about increasing the quota in a falling market. This is irrational as it will make the review more complicated," Axel Eggert, Director General of European steel association Eurofer, said.
The only other country with a country-specific quota, Russia, has 25,773t of rebar and 25,043t of wire rod awaiting allocation, 10.7pc and 7.9pc of its total allowance for the year, respectively.
Last month, rebar association Irepas warned that the influx when the quotas opened would cover most of the summer demand, causing already-weak EU prices to falter.
But for wire rod, Kris van Ginderdeuren, president of wire rod association Eunirpa said the scenario is very different. "In the last five months, there has not been such a big issue but now there is a substantial shortage of wire rod in the EU, which will become a problem in October."
The commission did not respond to Argus' requests for comment.

