Hydro European Extrusion Plant Closures Signal Deeper Pressure in Aluminium Demand

Hydro adds France’s Luce plant to its European aluminium extrusion closure plan.
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Hydro European Extrusion Plant Closures Signal Deeper Pressure in Aluminium Demand
Hydro

Hydro European extrusion plant closures are expanding as the Norwegian aluminium producer adds the Luce plant in France to its restructuring plan. The move brings the number of European extrusion plants targeted for closure in 2026 to six, reflecting continued weakness in regional aluminium demand.

Hydro previously announced plans to close extrusion plants in Cheltenham and Bedwas in the UK, Ludenscheid in Germany, Feltre in Italy, and Drunen in the Netherlands. The two UK closures have been confirmed and are scheduled for the second quarter.

Hydro European extrusion plant closures show that aluminium processors are still adapting to weak construction, automotive, and industrial demand across Europe. The company also closed its Birtley extrusion plant in the UK in May, underlining the scale of its capacity adjustment.

European Aluminium Extrusion Market Remains Under Pressure

The European aluminium extrusion market continues to face difficult operating conditions. Weak demand, high costs, and margin pressure are forcing producers to reassess plant networks and remove capacity from less competitive sites.

Hydro said the European market remains challenging and that further action is needed. The planned Luce closure fits into a broader effort to align capacity with demand while maintaining service levels in key markets such as France.

If all planned closures are completed, Hydro will retain 27 extrusion plants and five recycling facilities in its European extrusion business. This suggests the company is not exiting Europe, but reshaping its footprint around fewer, more competitive assets.

Luce Closure Adds Cost but Supports Long-Term Restructuring

Hydro estimates total restructuring costs related to the Luce closure at Nkr260mn, or about $27.2mn. Around Nkr5mn will affect the company’s adjusted earnings in the first quarter.

The near-term cost is part of a wider restructuring logic. Aluminium extrusion producers need scale, utilization, efficient logistics, and competitive energy and labour cost structures to protect margins in a weak market.

Hydro European extrusion plant closures also highlight a broader issue for Europe’s downstream aluminium sector. Demand recovery remains uncertain, while producers must continue investing in recycling, low-carbon aluminium, and higher-value applications to remain competitive.

The Metalnomist Commentary

Hydro’s restructuring shows that Europe’s aluminium challenge is moving downstream, not staying limited to smelting. The winners will be producers that can combine leaner capacity, recycling integration, and higher-value customer segments before demand fully recovers.

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