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India's Demand for Steel Scrap To Increase Sharply On Capacity Expansion

Updated: 6 days ago


“Scrap currently contributes nearly 21% of India’s

crude steel production, compared to a global average of around one-third. While the

scrap consumption in the Indian steel sector has been rising, the scrap availability is

estimated to rise to nearly 36 million tonnes, which clearly indicates that demand for

steel scrap will increase sharply as large-scale capacity expansion continues,” said

Shri Daya Nidhan Pandey, Joint Secretary, Ministry of Steel, addressing the

inaugural session of the 13th International Material Recycling Conference and

Exposition (IMRC 2026) at Jaipur today.


Referring to policy measures, Pandey said, “The Government has taken coordinated

action through the Steel Scrap Recycling Policy 2019, the Vehicle Scrappage Policy,

the rollout of Registered Vehicle Scrapping Facilities, and the integration of scrap

management with national circular economy initiatives. Recently notified Extended

Producer Responsibility (EPR) mandates for end-of-life vehicles and construction

and demolition waste are expected to accelerate formal scrap recycling.”

Looking ahead, Pandey said, “India aims to progressively raise the share of scrap in

steelmaking towards the global average of 31%. As the country moves towards 300

million tonnes of steel capacity by 2030 and 500 million tonnes by 2047, steel scrap

will play a decisive role in conserving raw materials, reducing coal imports, lowering

emissions, and supporting India’s commitment to achieve net zero by 2070.”

Shri. Pandey affirmed India's positioning in scrap – based steel making as a booster

to its decarbonisation efforts, as it helps to avoid carbon emission and also

substitutes iron ore, coking coal. As India is targeting 300 million tonnes of crude

steel capacity by 2030-31, the recycled steel scrap consumption will gain a

momentum. “

Highlighting operational challenges, Shri. Sanjay Mehta, President, MRAI,

stressed the urgent need for policy rationalisation. “The recycling industry needs GST

on scrap to be reduced to 5%, as current high rates are hurting growth and pushing

the sector into non-compliance. Further, the import duty on aluminium scrap needs

to be fully removed. Extended Producer Responsibility across e-waste, tyres and

plastics must also be implemented more effectively, as weak enforcement is

undermining the recycling value chain,” he said.


Emphasising the social dimension of recycling, Shri. Mehta added that nearly one-

third of scrap in India originates from ragpickers, households and small workshops.

“Lower GST and routing scrap purchases from the unorganised sector through UPI-

based transactions, while discouraging cash at the first level of collection, will help

bring these workers into the formal economy with dignity and sustainability,” he

said.

Speaking on the evolving industry landscape, Shri. Dhawal Shah, Senior Vice

President, MRAI, said that recycling in India has decisively transitioned from a

CSR-driven activity to a core business strategy. India today had more than 1400

start-ups operating across waste management and sustainability. At this pace, the

recycling industry could surpass mining well before 2050, reflecting the scale,

confidence and long-term opportunity emerging across the sector.”

Shri. Zain Nathani, Vice President of MRAI called India's recycling industry to

be a game changer and the Government's duty rationalisation impetus would further

help. Shri. Amar Singh, Secretary General of MRAI mentioned that the Indian

recycling industry has seen a transition and poised to take further leaps with

enhanced contributions in the GDP.

Shri. Rajat Agarwal, Managing Director of Gravita India Limited, while

addressing the role of finance and global capital stresses that capital was no longer a

constraint for responsible recyclers. He said, “Global green funds and ESG-focused

investors are actively backing scalable recycling platforms that deliver both financial

returns and environmental impact. Recycling today sits at this powerful

intersection.” He added that with strong governance, supportive policies such as

EPR, and India’s circular economy vision, Indian recyclers are now globally

competitive climate-solution providers.

Organised by the Material Recycling Association of India (MRAI), the three-day

conference is being held from January 20–22, 2026, at the Novotel Jaipur &

Convention Centre, Jaipur, and brings together policymakers, industry leaders, and

global stakeholders to discuss recycling’s role in sustainable industrial growth.

The conference opened with discussions on sustainability, climate change, energy

storage and circular economy transitions, while also addressing long-standing

industry concerns around regulatory clarity and market stability.

During the inaugural session, Lifetime Achievement Awards were presented to

Jinesh Shah, Director, Rajhans Impex Pvt. Ltd.; Purshottam Parolia, CMD, Nihon

Ispat Pvt. Ltd.; and Hitesh Shah, Chairman, Mono Steel (India) Limited. The Global

Recycler of the Year Award was conferred on Anshul Gupta, Chairman, PAN Gulf

IInternational.

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