These measures have already helped some major steel producers return into black as far as operating profits are concerned, steel Joint Secretary Syedain Abbasi told PTI.
"Right now, the steel industry is growing at around 5-6 per cent. We took a lot of measures to boost the domestic steel industry," he said.
"The government has ensured that unfair means like dumping are not encouraged. Now, as most of the bottlenecks have been removed, in next 3 years we should see a significant growth which can reach to 8 per cent," he said.
"The industry has geared up to the challenges. Exports which were stagnating or had shrunken, doubled in 2016-17," he said.
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The imports also fell significantly, he added.
As per the Joint Plant Committee's report, export of total finished steel was up by 102.1 per cent at 8.244 MT in 2016-17 as against 4.079 MT a year-ago.
On May 3, the Union Cabinet approved a new National Steel Policy that aims to achieve steel making capacity of 300 million tonnes by 2030 with an additional investment of Rs 10 lakh crore.
It also approved another policy to promote the use of domestic steel products in government organisations.
Last month, India imposed anti-dumping duty on tempered glass, used for protecting mobile phone screens, from China for five years to protect the domestic industry from below- cost imports.