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| Hydro LNG |
Qatalum shutdown plans have raised fresh aluminium supply concerns after Hydro said its Qatar-based joint venture had started a controlled closure of aluminium operations. The decision followed the shutdown of LNG production by its energy supplier, QatarEnergy, after disruption at the Ras Laffan industrial complex.
Hydro said the Qatalum shutdown is expected to be completed by the end of March. If the smelter is fully closed, restarting operations could take 6-12 months, making the event a potentially significant supply-side shock for primary aluminium and value-added products.
Qatalum is a 50:50 joint venture between Hydro and Qatar Aluminum Manufacturing. The operation has 636,000 t/yr of primary aluminium capacity and a 664,000 t/yr casthouse, making it an important producer in the Gulf aluminium supply chain.
Energy Disruption Exposes Smelter Vulnerability
Aluminium smelting is highly exposed to power and energy reliability because production depends on continuous electricity supply. A controlled shutdown can protect equipment and safety, but a full closure creates major restart complexity.
Hydro has issued a force majeure notice to Qatalum customers. This signals that supply commitments may be affected as the company manages the operational impact of the energy disruption.
The wider industrial effect could extend beyond aluminium. Production of some downstream products, including urea, polymers, and methanol, has also been disrupted, showing how energy infrastructure risks can spread across multiple industrial value chains.
Hormuz Risk Supports Demand for Aluminium Value-Added Products
Concerns over prolonged shipping disruption through the Strait of Hormuz are already affecting aluminium buying behavior. Demand for aluminium value-added products from Asian consumers has increased over the past two days as buyers assess supply risk from the Middle East.
This matters because the Gulf is a major hub for energy-intensive aluminium production. Any prolonged disruption could tighten availability of billets, slabs, foundry alloys, and other value-added aluminium products used in extrusion, rolling, casting, construction, transport, and packaging.
The Qatalum shutdown also highlights the strategic link between energy security and metals supply. Aluminium producers with stable power access may gain stronger pricing power if Middle East logistics and production risks persist.
The Metalnomist Commentary
The Qatalum shutdown shows how quickly energy conflict can become a metals supply event. Aluminium markets should watch not only smelter capacity, but also LNG infrastructure, power reliability, and Hormuz shipping risk.

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