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China's Ministry of Commerce Thursday stepped up its defense of the iron ore benchmark system in the face of moves by the big three international mining giants to end the decades-old pricing mechanism.
Ministry spokesman Yao Jian said the benchmark pricing system, which offered a transparent, stable and foreseeable trading platform to both the suppliers and buyers, had enabled the two sides to control production costs and balance their interests.
China's booming iron ore market would tend to be more rational as the nation had diversified supply channels at home and abroad, said Yao.
Iron ore source countries had risen from 10 to 20 in recent years, said Yao.
He said Chinese steel mills had reduced reliance on imports, lowering the proportion of iron ore imports from 70 percent to 50 to 60 percent this year, as the number of domestic suppliers rose.
The world's largest iron ore importer, China imported 155 million tonnes of ore in the first quarter, with an average price of 96 U.S. dollars per tonne, up 20.7 percent over the same time last year, said Yao.
Last year's iron ore price negotiations reached an impasse in June after China Iron and Steel Association (CISA) insisted on a 45 percent discount over last year's prices. Before that, a 33 percent benchmark price reduction had been agreed by BHP, Rio and Vale with other Asian steel mills.
As of now, the two sides have not made any progress for this year's price talk.
The country imported a record 630 million tonnes of iron ore in 2009, 68 percent of the world's total shipments. Imports from Australia and Brazil accounted for 64.4 percent of the total, according to Customs statistics.