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| Aluminium Dunkerque |
Aluminium Dunkerque acquisition plans will give Aluminium Bahrain a major foothold in European primary aluminium production. Alba has agreed to acquire the French smelter from US private equity firm American Industrial Partners, creating a more geographically diversified aluminium group.
Aluminium Dunkerque is the largest aluminium smelter in the EU, with capacity of around 300,000 t/yr. The facility gives Alba direct exposure to European customers, EU industrial policy, and the region’s growing demand for lower-carbon aluminium supply.
The Aluminium Dunkerque acquisition also reflects a broader reshaping of aluminium ownership in Europe. Smelters with stable power access, strong industrial customers, and low-carbon potential are becoming strategically valuable as Europe tries to preserve energy-intensive manufacturing.
Alba Targets Long-Term Industrial Strategy in France
Alba said the transaction would combine two aluminium producers with complementary regional footprints. The company plans to maintain an industrial strategy anchored in France, led locally, and focused on operational stability.
This is important because Aluminium Dunkerque has changed ownership several times in recent years. American Industrial Partners has owned the smelter since 2021, after foreclosing on shares linked to GFG Alliance’s financing default. The facility had previously been owned by GFG subsidiary Liberty France Industries.
Alba’s management emphasized continuity, employee support, and continued investment. That message is likely aimed at French stakeholders, including workers, customers, power suppliers, and policymakers concerned about the future of domestic industrial capacity.
Low-Carbon Aluminium Becomes a Strategic Asset
Aluminium Dunkerque acquisition plans could strengthen Alba’s position in low-carbon aluminium markets. European customers increasingly need aluminium with stronger emissions credentials for automotive, packaging, construction, electrical equipment, and energy transition applications.
Alba said it wants to expand low-carbon production capabilities at the French site. This aligns with France’s industrial and energy priorities, especially as Europe seeks to defend strategic manufacturing while reducing carbon emissions.
The possible involvement of Bpifrance also matters. Alba said it is willing to offer the French state-backed investment bank a shareholding position as part of the transaction. Such participation could help align the deal with national industrial policy and support long-term investment at the smelter.
The Metalnomist Commentary
The Alba deal shows that European smelting assets remain strategically attractive when they offer scale, customer access, and low-carbon potential. Aluminium Dunkerque is not just a capacity acquisition; it is a gateway into Europe’s industrial decarbonisation agenda.

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