A group of international steel producing countries has called for urgent action to curb overproduction.
The call comes days after international talks to find measures to tackle the industry crisis failed.
The joint statement comes from the US, Canada, the EU, Japan, Mexico, South Korea, Switzerland and Turkey.
Record production in China has in the past months led to criticism that it was distorting international markets by selling steel at a loss.
The statement calls for "ongoing international dialogue" to remove "market-distorting policies" and promote greater transparency in the global industry.
On Monday, representatives from more than 30 countries met in Belgium but concluded only that overcapacity had to be dealt with in a swift and structural way.
The US explicitly pointed the finger at China, saying the country would face possible trade action if it didn't cut overcapacity.
But China rejected suggestions that it subsidised its loss-making steel companies, and the meeting ended without any formal agreement.
China is the world's biggest steel producer, accounting for around 822 million tonnes a year.
On Tuesday, the country said its production hit a record high last month as rising profits had encouraged more output.
With China's domestic market slowing, their producers have been looking for export markets, such as the EU.
This has led to accusations of unfair competition, that Chinese producers are "dumping" steel products on overseas markets - that is not just selling them cheaply, taking advantage of their lower production costs, but actually selling them at a loss.
India's Tata steel recently announced plans to sell its loss-making UK business, citing "rapidly deteriorated" trading conditions due to global oversupply.
In 2015, the EU imposed anti-dumping duties for six months on some steel imports from China and Taiwan.
The EU and China have already clashed over the alleged dumping of products such as wine, solar panel and steel pipes.
Source: bbc.com