ATTM Titanium Sponge Operations Continue Despite Middle East Freight Risk

ATTM says Saudi titanium sponge operations remain normal despite Middle East freight disruption.
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ATTM Titanium Sponge Operations Continue Despite Middle East Freight Risk
ATTM

ATTM titanium sponge operations remain normal despite rising logistics pressure from the war in the Middle East. The Saudi Arabian titanium sponge producer has reported no direct operational impact and does not expect material disruption to exports at this stage.

The company is a joint venture between Saudi group AMIC and Japan’s Toho Titanium. Its plant is located in Yanbu, on Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea coast, giving the facility strategic access to international titanium feedstock and export routes.

ATTM titanium sponge operations matter because the company supplies aerospace-grade titanium sponge to major Western markets, including the US, UK, France, and Italy. It also supplies ferro-titanium grades to Estonia, with smaller volumes shipped elsewhere.

Titanium Supply Chain Faces Freight and Feedstock Exposure

Regional freight markets have become more volatile as conflict disrupts shipping routes and energy-linked supply chains across the Middle East. Several aluminium production facilities have already faced production pressure because they could not secure imported feedstocks, energy supplies, or export access.

ATTM said it is actively managing logistics and does not anticipate material export disruption. This is important because Saudi Arabia imports most of its titanium ore and concentrate feedstocks from Mozambique and Australia.

ATTM titanium sponge operations therefore depend not only on plant performance, but also on inbound ore logistics and outbound sponge shipment routes. Any sustained disruption in freight availability, insurance costs, or port access could still affect titanium supply timing even if production remains stable.

Aerospace Sponge Output Remains Strategically Important

ATTM produced 12,000t of titanium sponge in 2025, compared with a nameplate capacity of 15,600 t/yr. That makes the company a meaningful non-Russian and non-Chinese titanium sponge source for aerospace and industrial customers.

The company’s relationship with Toho Titanium also strengthens its technical position. Aerospace-grade sponge requires strict control over chemistry, trace elements, and production consistency, making qualification and supplier reliability more important than spot-market availability.

For Western aerospace supply chains, stable ATTM titanium sponge operations provide reassurance during a period of geopolitical stress. However, the situation also highlights a broader vulnerability: titanium sponge supply remains concentrated in a small number of qualified producers, while feedstock logistics depend on long-distance maritime routes.

The Metalnomist Commentary

ATTM’s stability is positive for aerospace titanium buyers, but the real risk sits in logistics rather than furnace operations. Titanium sponge customers should treat Middle East freight disruption as a supply-chain risk that can emerge before production itself is affected.

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