SHANGHAI, May 30 (Xinhua) -- Chinese steel mills have decided to continue negotiations over the price of iron ore with major foreign miners, the China Iron and Steel Association (ISA) said Tuesday to the denial of reports that Chinese steelmakers will accept a
19-percent rise in contract prices.
"We will continue price talks with miners in June," a
reliable source with the ISA who declined to be named told Xinhua.
"We do not accept the price increase," he noted.
Chinese steel mills made the decision at a recent
national meeting after the world's leading iron ore provider, Brazil's Companhia
Vale do Rio Doc (CVRD), and German steel producer ThyssenKrupp AG agreed May 16
on the 19-percent increase in contract prices of iron ore.
Chinese steel mills are resolved to continue talks
although some of their foreign counterparts have agreed to the price hike, the
source said.
They rejected to reply to confirm letters on the
price rise by the CVRD, citing that "the talks over price is not concluded
yet,"he said.
They hope to secure a lower price rise after being
forced to accept a 71.5 percent hike in the iron ore price last year, he said.
So far, Chinese steel mills have not reached an
agreement with the world's three largest iron ore suppliers, including
Anglo-Australian miner BHP Billiton, Australia's Rio Tinto Group and Brazil's
CVRD.
The ISA said earlier that setting the iron ore price
without considering the market of China, the world's biggest buyer of ironore,
is unacceptable.
It said the Chinese central government has worked out
a set of policies aiming to regroup the iron and steel industry and phase out
out-dated production capacity in order to upgrade the industry's centralization,
which will surely dampen China's demandon imported iron ore.
China has always hoped to achieve win-win in iron ore
price talks, based on the principle of equality and mutual benefit and the
international market supply and demand situation, it said.
Chinese steel firms imported 275 million tons of iron
ore last year, or about 43 percent of the global marine trade volume of iron ore
and 70 percent of the Asia's total imports.
China is estimated to import about 301 million tons
of iron orein 2006, an increase of 10 percent from 2005, the ISA predicated
early this month.
Currently, the European market reports the highest
price for steel, the official said.
By the end of April, the composite steel price index
on the global market rose to 149 points, close to last year's highest 153.4
points. However, the composite steel price index on the Chinese market only
reported 105.67 points at the end of April, down 23.6 percent from March's
highest 138.33 points.
"Under such circumstances when the Asian market,
especially theChinese market, is at a low price level, Chinese steel firms
wouldnot accept a decision made without taking into account the Chinesemarket,"
the ISA said. Enditem