Electricity price determines competitiveness of green steelmaking

The transition to low-carbon steelmaking technologies dramatically increases electricity consumption, making power prices a decisive factor in the competitiveness of future “green” steel production. This trend is especially pronounced in hydrogen-based and electrolysis-driven processes, where electricity accounts for a great share of production costs.

These ideas are unveiled in a new study of GMK Center “EU electricity market: challenges for green transition in steel Industry.”

The report outlines that scrap-based electric arc furnace (EAF) production already uses five times more electricity than traditional blast furnace-basic oxygen furnace (BF-BOF) route. The electricity intensity rises eightfold in DRI-EAF setups.

For more advanced decarbonization routes, such as hydrogen-based DRI combined with EAF or smelter and BOF, electricity demand can soar to 37-40 times that of BF-BOF production. The most power-intensive option, molten oxide electrolysis (MOE), uses 41 times more electricity than conventional steelmaking.

As a result, electricity prices will have a growing impact on production costs. For example, in the natural gas-based DRI route with carbon capture, electricity’s share of production costs can rise from 2% to 11% as prices increase from $20/MWh to $100/MWh. In hydrogen-based DRI-EAF production, the cost share jumps from 11% to 38% under the same price scenario. The hydrogen-based DRI-smelter-BOF route follows a similar pattern.

This sensitivity stems from the fact that “green” hydrogen (the core input for many decarbonized steel technologies) is itself energy-intensive to produce, making its cost directly tied to electricity prices.

As previously reported by GMK Center, average monthly day-ahead wholesale electricity prices across most EU markets continued to decline in May. The downward trend was largely driven by higher output from renewable sources, particularly wind and solar, and weaker demand, even as gas and carbon prices remained volatile.

Share
Published by
Andrii Glushchenko
Tags: decarbonization green steel electricity prices
  • Global Market

Midrex is to build a DRI production plant for US Steel

Midrex has signed a contract with US Steel to supply a Midrex process complex with…

Sunday June 21, 2026
  • Global Market

European carbon prices rose to €80/t in June

European carbon prices (EUA, December 2026 contract), according to ICE, rose to €80/t in June.…

Sunday June 21, 2026
  • Global Market

Decarbonisation of heavy industry will shape China’s energy transition – study

China’s climate targets have reached a stage where their achievement depends entirely on reducing carbon…

Saturday June 20, 2026
  • Industry

The steel industry is concerned about the slow progress of green steel projects

The steel industry is concerned about the slow progress being made in the field of…

Friday June 19, 2026
  • Global Market

Construction in the EU rose by 0.8% m/m in April

In April 2026, seasonally adjusted output in the EU’s construction sector rose by 0.8% compared…

Friday June 19, 2026
  • Global Market

POSCO is launching South Korea’s largest electric arc furnace

POSCO has completed construction of South Korea’s largest electric arc furnace (EAF) at its steelworks…

Friday June 19, 2026