News » Fit for 55 package signals step-change in EU climate policy
Fit for 55 package signals step-change in EU climate policy
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The EU Climate Law - recently endorsed by the EU institutions – sets the ambition to reduce emissions by 55% by 2030 compared to 1990 levels and to reach climate neutrality by 2050. This target makes the EU by far the most ambitious major region worldwide in the field of climate policy.
This specific target forms part of the wider European Green Deal, first presented by the Commission in December 2019. This set out a detailed vision to make Europe the first climate-neutral continent by 2050, safeguard biodiversity, establish a circular economy and eliminate pollution, while boosting the competitiveness of European industry and ensuring a just transition for the regions and workers affected.
That political ambition is now to be made whole in a raft of legislation set to formally emerge on 14 July 2021 in the form of the Fit for 55 package, including: the revision of the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS), a Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), revision of the Energy Tax Directive (ETD), amendments to the Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Directives, as well as others on the reduction of methane emissions from the power sector, greenhouse emissions from land use and rules on passenger cars and alternative fuels.
The Fit for 55 package is one of the most significant - and largest - groups of measures the EU has ever released in one go.
The European steel industry supports the objectives of the European Green Deal – and thus understands and supports the rationale behind the Great Leap of the Fit for 55 package – as long as it proves to be a strategy for growth: with effective carbon leakage protection, support for low carbon technologies (through de-risking instruments like carbon contracts for difference), demand-side measures to create markets for green steel, and affordable, low-carbon energy,.
Our sector already had the ambition to reduce CO2 emissions by 30% by 2030 compared to 2018 levels (which is the same as -55% compared to 1990). This reduction can only be achieved if the large number of advanced decarbonisation projects led by European steel companies – over 100 across Europe – are covered by a robust and supportive EU framework.
With the new, more ambitious EU climate target and increasing carbon price, it is ever more essential to prevent carbon leakage effectively.
EUROFER will be working hard to ensure that the best possible framework is created out of Fit for 55, ensuring that European steel can continue to be competitive during its transition to the green and sustainable future.
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Brussels, 11 September 2025 – The lack of a solution for steel in the EU-U.S. trade negotiations, the ongoing unpredictability of the global geoeconomic situation, and persistently weak demand against an ever-growing global steel overcapacity are squeezing the European steel market. In 2025, the outlook points to stagnation, with potential recovery only in 2026 — conditional on improvements in the global economy and an easing of trade tensions. According to EUROFER’s latest Economic and Steel Market Outlook, another recession both in apparent steel consumption (-0.2%, revised upwards from -0.9%) and in steel-using sectors (-0.7%, revised downwards from -0.5%) is confirmed for 2025. Growth prospects are now delayed at least to 2026, with projections of a rebound for both apparent steel consumption (+3.1%) and steel-using sectors (+1.8%). However, steel imports continue to hold historically high market shares (25%) in 2025.
Third quarter 2025 report. Data up to, and including, first quarter 2025
Brussels, 10 September 2025 – Reacting to today’s State of the Union Address delivered by Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Axel Eggert, Director General of the European Steel Association (EUROFER) said: