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| Qatalum Aluminium |
Qatalum aluminium output will remain at around 60% capacity after QatarEnergy confirmed it would continue supplying gas to the smelter at reduced levels. The update prevents a full shutdown of the Qatar-based aluminium operation and reduces the risk of a prolonged production outage.
Hydro had earlier said Qatalum had started a controlled shutdown of its aluminium operations after QatarEnergy took the Ras Laffan LNG export terminal offline. The disruption followed a drone attack at the wider Ras Laffan industrial complex, raising immediate concerns over gas availability for energy-intensive aluminium production.
Qatalum aluminium output now has a clearer short-term operating path. Hydro said the reduced gas supply is sufficient to maintain production at about 60% capacity until further notice. That decision is important because aluminium smelters are difficult and costly to restart after a complete shutdown.
Reduced Operations Protect Qatalum From a Long Restart Timeline
Maintaining Qatalum aluminium output at reduced capacity gives the joint venture operational flexibility. Hydro said a full shutdown could have required a restart timeline of six to twelve months. By keeping the smelter running, Qatalum can move back toward full production more quickly once gas supply conditions improve.
The smelter has a nameplate capacity of 636,000 tonnes per year of primary aluminium. It also operates a 664,000-tonne casthouse, making it an important supplier of aluminium products to international markets.
The gas supply issue also highlights the vulnerability of aluminium smelting to energy disruption. Primary aluminium production requires continuous power and stable thermal management. When gas supply is constrained, producers must balance output reduction against the severe operational risk of shutting down potlines completely.
Hormuz Shipping Disruption Adds Pressure to Aluminium Supply Chains
The production update does not remove the broader supply-chain risk. Shipments from aluminium smelters to international customers remain disrupted because of halted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. The waterway is a critical route for Gulf industrial exports, including metals and energy products.
Security risks in the Middle East Gulf have intensified after attacks on several vessels and US action against mine-laying ships near the strait. Any mine-related threat in regional waters could prolong disruption to commercial shipping even if wider hostilities ease.
For global aluminium buyers, the issue is therefore both production and logistics. Qatalum may avoid a full shutdown, but reduced operating rates and shipping uncertainty can still tighten availability, delay deliveries, and increase risk premiums in aluminium supply contracts.
The Metalnomist Commentary
Qatalum’s 60% operating plan is a damage-control outcome rather than a full recovery. The bigger market risk is that energy disruption and Hormuz shipping pressure could hit Gulf aluminium supply at the same time.

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