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| Alba |
Bahrain's Alba sets Al production record in 2025, even after a December fire event. Bahrain's Alba sets Al production record in 2025 by holding operations steady and protecting shipments. As a result, the update reinforces Alba’s position as a reliable Middle East primary aluminium supplier.
Bahrain's Alba sets Al production record in 2025 with output of 1.623mn tonnes. Production rose by just 0.05% from 2024, but it still set a new high. Meanwhile, Alba reported a second straight year with zero lost-time injuries.
What the record output signals for Middle East aluminium supply
Bahrain's Alba sets Al production record in 2025 while regional smelters prioritize stability over headline expansions. Alba now emphasizes potline efficiency, rebuilds, and operational upgrades. Therefore, the company aims to lift throughput within existing nameplate constraints.
The December incident tested that strategy under stress. A fire hit a power rectiformer supplying the production plant on 19 December. However, Alba said operations and shipments stayed unaffected.
Safety performance and asset integrity become competitive levers
Alba’s safety result strengthens customer confidence and internal productivity. Zero lost-time injuries for two consecutive years reduces disruption risk and supports smoother maintenance cycles. As a result, it also improves the credibility of “operational excellence” claims with industrial buyers.
The market still watched the fire closely. A European trader suggested around 50,000 tonnes from one potline was affected. However, the key takeaway is continuity of deliveries and rapid containment.
Alba’s next value driver will be execution on potline upgrades. Better current efficiency, stable power systems, and disciplined maintenance can protect margins in volatile premium cycles. Therefore, the company’s near-term edge may come from reliability, not new tonnes.
The Metalnomist Commentary
This is a performance story disguised as a flat growth story. However, smelters that deliver consistently will win long-term contracts. The next risk to watch is electrical infrastructure resilience during upgrade cycles.

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