India scrapped an export tax levied on low grade iron ore lumps and fines with below 58% iron content, in a notification late on Friday, reversing an earlier order from May when it had raised the tax to a steep 50 per cent to rein-in inflation.
In the notification, which takes effect on Saturday, the government also removed export tax on some steel intermediates from 15 per cent, also imposed in May, reports Reuters.
New Delhi also lowered the export tax on iron ore and concentrates other than roasted iron pyrites to 30 per cent from 50 per cent.
"The Central Government, on being satisfied that it is necessary in the public interest so to do, hereby makes the following further amendments," the notification said.
India's iron ore exports had dropped to "nearly zero" in October due to higher export taxes and was further expected to languish due to lower demand from China, a senior industry official had said earlier this month.
Producers of low-grade ore depend largely on overseas markets, as most major domestic steel producers consume high-grade iron ore, the Federation of Indian Mineral Industries (FIMI) had said earlier this year.
High export tax on intermediate steel products also significantly hurt shipments.
India's finished steel exports more than halved during the first seven months of the fiscal year that began in April 2022, according to the latest government data.
Last week, India's JSW Steel Ltd, the country's largest steelmaker by capacity, had said it expects its exports to fall to an over five-year low in 2022/23 because of reduced global demand and the high export tax.