Our mission is to “Empower everybody with access to the European steel market and benefit from all it has to offer, regardless of ones personal network.”
In today’s steel market, successful participants often thrive on their extensive individual networks or private company resources, whilst traditional offline methods remain a major role in discovering what Europe has to offer.
Steelmap.eu strives to enhance the European steel industry by providing a single platform where suppliers and buyers can discover each other with ease.
We combine publicly available data—showing which European company handles which type of steel—into a unified market directory, so you can make informed procurement or sales decisions.
Why Europe?
Global geopolitics are ever-changing, encouraging the EU and the UK to look inward and to each other. Safeguards, anti-dumping measures, and CBAM inadvertedly shifts demand for imported steel toward local sources. Steelmap.eu aims to help smooth this transition by making the entire European steel ecosystem easier to navigate.
How we work
All search results originate from a company’s own website, brochures, or publicly available statements. We simply bring together who handles what grade and shape in one place for your convenience.
Companies can also add or supplement their own information, verifying their listings and contributing to a more complete directory for all users.
Who we are
Edwin Felix – founder Steelmap.eu
Steelmap.eu is founded, managed, and moderated by Edwin Felix, who developed the idea for a steel directory after experiencing first-hand how the European steel market operates as a steel trader in the Netherlands.
“I noticed how knowledge and supply accessibility in the steel industry is often privileged to those with the best connections or to companies with the largest resources.
Even though we live in an increasingly digital and transparent world, the steel industry remains mostly disconnected from this and still operates in the golden days of face-to-face meetings and interpersonal partnerships.
There must be a way to do this more equally, smartly, and efficiently. All the information is out there—yet nobody seems to utilize it.”