Press Coverage

We get a lot of press on issues impacting the steel container industry. Here's a selection from The Hazardous Cargo Bulletin:

Skolnik Bucks the Trend — March 2007
Thinning Down, Pricing Up — January 2006
Eastern Promise — August 2005
Steely Determination — Jan 2005
Bargain Barrels — January 2004
Expand and deliver — September 2003
A drum is a drum is a drum — March 2003
Survival Instinct — January 2003
www dot packaging — December 2002
No Surrender — December 2002
Defensive coil — April 2002
Against the current — April 2002
A Character of Steel — January 2002
UN Fair? — November 2001
Get out of that — July 2001
An end to whacking? — September 2000
Face the future — September 2000
Happy birthday, POPS — August 2000
My Kinda Drum — June 1999

The following articles should be read in sequence:
Accidents Waiting to Happen by Ken Hardman — July 1999
Thin Skinned by Peter Mackay (in response to Ken Hardman) — September 1999
Letter to the Editor from Howard Skolnik (in response to Peter Mackay) — September 1999
Letter to the Editor from Martin Castle (in response to Peter Mackay) — October 1999

President Bush's tariffs on steel imports create challenges for steel drum manufacturers and reconditioners

US President George W Bush caused global uproar by announcing his decision to impose tariffs on steel imports last month. The tariffs are set to stay in place for the next three years. In an attempt to rescue the floundering US steel industry, Bush has unwittingly damaged those in his country that have to buy steel. For every job in the steel industry, there are 75 jobs in the industries that buy steel, according to a report in the Chicago Tribune.

"Steel prices will increase by an unprecedented amount due to his decision," says Steel Shipping Container Institute (SSCI) chairman Kyle Stavig. "Our membership is doing its best to manage this challenge in the marketplace. Individually our members are working to secure steel for their requirements at competitive prices."

"For Skolnik and the steel drum industry as a unit, we are but a small user in the greater scheme of industry," says Howard Skolnik, chief executive officer of Skolnik Industries. " While much of our steel is domestic, we also purchase some foreign steel via US steel service centres. Since we have purchase contracts through the middle of the year, we may not see any effects until the second half of 2002."

"Either way, it is typical for us to pass the direct steel cost down the supply chain," Skolnik continues. "Hopefully our margins will allow us to absorb some of the increases, but steel price adjustments are not new to the customers of steel products."

The demand for steel in the US is set to overtake supply following the President's decision, according to SSCI statistics. US steel producer LTV is no longer making steel, which subtracts an annual volume of 7.6m tonnes from available steel supplies. Without foreign steel imports, accounting for 38m tonnes, the shortfall of supply stands at 29.5m tonnes.

"Availability of steel is more of a concern as the US mills tend to favour their larger customers. As a matter of practice, Skolnik only buys via steel service centres that carry clout with the mills, as Skolnik alone would not be a significant mill customer," Skolnik concludes, offering strategic advice for companies affected.

The Bush decision could also have knock-on effects for steel drum reconditioners. "It is a bit of a double-edged sword," comments Reusable Industrial Packaging Association (RIPA) president Paul Rankin. "Speaking macro-economically, anything that modestly drives up the price of new steel drums tends to have a positive impact on the ability of reconditioners to sell into certain markets."

"Conversely, if the higher cost of new steel drums cuts significantly into the market share of that industry, we lose raw material supply which drives up the cost of used steel drums because supply is reduced." Rankin concludes, "In the best of worlds, we would like a stable, healthy and expanding new steel drum industry."