World Trade Organization (WTO) director-general Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala announced the launching of the Steel Standards Principles during the first day of COP 28, aimed at aligning how greenhouse gas emissions are measured in the steel sector.

The announcement took place during the Business and Philanthropy Climate Forum roundtable at the COP28 UN Climate Change Conference.

The Steel Standards Principles, developed by standard setting bodies, international organizations, steel producers and industry associations, recognize that the iron and steel sector accounts for approximately 8% of annual global greenhouse gas emissions and that these emissions will need to be reduced by at least 90% for the sector to play a credible role in achieving climate targets.

The Principles call for establishing common methodologies on measuring greenhouse gas emissions within the iron and steel sector in order to accelerate the transition to near-zero emissions.

“Fragmented and uncoordinated trade policies make it harder for the steel industry to decarbonize. They add uncertainty for producers, hamper cross-border movement of green technologies and inputs, and slow investments in clean technology.”

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, director-general, World Trade Organization

At the roundtable, the director-general announced the WTO Secretariat's support and said: “Fragmented and uncoordinated trade policies make it harder for the steel industry to decarbonize. They add uncertainty for producers, hamper cross-border movement of green technologies and inputs, and slow investments in clean technology.”

Over 35 key steelmakers, industry associations, standard setting bodies, international organizations and initiatives have endorsed the Steel Standards Principles.

''The Steel Standards Principles establish the key foundations of a common framework that is needed for driving the decarbonisation of the industry globally.”

Annie Heaton, CEO of ResponsibleSteel

Annie Heaton, CEO of ResponsibleSteel, a multistakeholder standard and certification initiative, said: “The diversity of standards for measuring steel carbon emissions makes assessing how one tonne of steel compares to another extremely challenging. The Steel Standards Principles establish the key foundations of a common framework that is needed for driving the decarbonisation of the industry globally.”

Nicola Davidson, vice president for sustainable development and corporate communications at steel producer ArcelorMittal, said the Principles “will help create broader alignment on how to define low carbon steel. This is particularly important in a hard to abate sector like steel.”

“Many people probably don’t realise that there is not just one way to make steel and different steels have different carbon footprints depending on the input metallics and the technology.''

Nicola Davidson, vice president for sustainable development and corporate communications, ArcelorMittal

“Many people probably don’t realise that there is not just one way to make steel and different steels have different carbon footprints depending on the input metallics and the technology. A system that recognises this is important, particularly when the transition to net zero will take many years,” she said.