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EU axes steel emissions label from ‘made in Europe’ law, draft shows

By Thomson Reuters Mar 3, 2026 | 7:01 AM

By Kate Abnett

BRUSSELS, March 3 (Reuters) – The European Union has scrapped plans for an emissions label for steel in its upcoming “made in Europe” law, which had initially been intended to help make green steel central ​to efforts to revive industries, a draft of the proposal showed.

The last-minute ‌change ahead of expected publication on Wednesday of a proposal for a law officially named the EU’s Industrial Accelerator Act would be a blow to low-carbon steelmakers. They have called for the label to help make their products more visible and attractive to consumers.

Some departments inside the European ‌Commission, ​however, expressed concern that the label would create more ⁠complex bureaucracy for companies when ⁠another EU product labelling law is also being drawn up to address emissions from steel, EU officials told Reuters.

Earlier drafts of the law, reviewed by Reuters, included a voluntary label for the emissions intensity of steel, and a ​methodology companies would use to calculate this. A more recent draft, reviewed by Reuters on Tuesday, axed the label.

OTHER MEASURES COULD BOOST LOW-CARBON STEEL

The latest draft ⁠said Brussels would instead include measures to support ⁠demand for low-carbon steel through an EU law on sustainability standards ​for products. It did not give a date for when this proposal would be ​made public.

The Industrial Accelerator Act has been repeatedly delayed and the ‌draft could change before publication. A European Commission spokesperson declined to comment.

The law will require that when public money is spent to support technologies, a minimum share of those products is manufactured locally.

The latest draft, seen by Reuters, still included a requirement that ⁠steel bought through public procurement would need to be at least 25% low-carbon, to try to kick-start demand for greener steel.

Low-carbon steel producer Hydnum Steel said in a statement ⁠a label was needed ‌now and the EU should not “let the ‘perfect’ be the enemy ⁠of the ‘timely'”.

“Without this classification, the impact of measures designed to ​create ‌lead markets will be delayed, failing to direct vital investment ​toward European ⁠producers at this critical juncture,” it said.

A spokesperson for steel industry association Eurofer said delaying the label “risks kicking decisions further down the road at a time when investors need certainty now”.

Across Europe, a number of green steel projects have been delayed or run into difficulties as the technology remains new and investment costs high.

(Reporting by Kate Abnett; ​editing by Barbara Lewis)