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| Kibar Americas |
Kibar Americas Fairmont facility acquisition gave Turkey-based Assan Aluminyum its first manufacturing footprint in the US. Kibar Americas, a subsidiary of Assan, bought Novelis’ former aluminum rolling facility in Fairmont, West Virginia.
The deal gives Kibar Americas an established industrial site with cold-rolling and finishing capabilities. The 380,000ft² facility is expected to support production of aluminum foil products, although the company is still evaluating future use options.
Kibar Americas Fairmont facility plans matter because aluminum foil demand remains tied to packaging, industrial applications, energy systems, electronics, and flexible materials supply chains. A US manufacturing base also gives Assan a closer position to North American customers.
Fairmont Site Offers Ready Aluminum Rolling Infrastructure
The former Novelis site gives Kibar Americas an existing production platform rather than a greenfield project. Its cold-rolling mill and finishing capabilities could shorten the path toward US-based aluminum foil output.
Novelis announced in March 2025 that it would close the Fairmont facility by 30 June 2025 as part of a portfolio consolidation plan. Kibar’s acquisition keeps the site inside the aluminum value chain and could preserve industrial optionality in West Virginia.
The transaction details were not disclosed. However, the strategic meaning is clear: Kibar Americas Fairmont facility acquisition allows Assan to expand beyond its Turkish production base and enter the US market with physical manufacturing capacity.
Assan Aluminyum Extends Its Foil Strategy Into the US
Assan Aluminyum currently has 360,000 t/yr of flat-rolled aluminum capacity across its Istanbul and Kocaeli facilities. Of that total, 130,000 t/yr is dedicated to aluminum foil output.
The Fairmont acquisition could complement that existing foil platform. It may help Assan reduce logistics distance, improve customer responsiveness, and manage trade or tariff exposure in the North American market.
For the US aluminum sector, the deal shows continuing interest in downstream rolling and foil capacity. While primary aluminum production faces power-cost pressure, downstream aluminum processing remains strategically relevant for packaging, manufacturing, automotive, and industrial supply chains.
The Metalnomist Commentary
Kibar’s move shows that established US rolling assets still carry strategic value, even after major producers consolidate capacity. For Assan, the Fairmont site could become a foothold for building a North American aluminum foil platform rather than only an overseas acquisition.

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