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| Vedanta Metals |
Vedanta metals production reached a record level in the April 2025-March 2026 fiscal year as efficiency improvements, mine restarts and capacity additions lifted output across key businesses. The Indian mining group reported stronger production in alumina, aluminium, zinc, lead, chrome ore, ferro-chrome and copper cathode.
The strongest increase came from the Lanjigarh alumina refinery, where output rose by 48% on the year to 2.91mn t after the second furnace restarted in the first quarter. This strengthened Vedanta’s upstream aluminium raw material base and improved integration across its aluminium value chain.
Vedanta metals production growth also reflected better utilisation of existing assets. Aluminium output rose by 1% to 2.45mn t, compared with 2.42mn t a year earlier, showing stable primary metal production despite a more challenging cost and energy environment.
Alumina and Base Metals Strengthened Vedanta’s Integrated Platform
The Lanjigarh refinery result was strategically important because alumina availability directly affects aluminium smelter economics. Higher alumina output can reduce exposure to external feedstock volatility and support more stable aluminium production planning.
Zinc and lead production also improved during the year. Combined output reached 1.11mn t, up 2%, supported by better mined metal grades and higher production levels.
This growth reinforced Vedanta’s position across India’s industrial metals chain. Zinc and lead remain important for galvanising, batteries, infrastructure, alloys and manufacturing, while aluminium continues to support transport, power, packaging and construction demand.
Chrome, Ferro-Chrome and Copper Output Added Downstream Depth
Vedanta metals production also benefited from a sharp recovery at Facor, the group’s ferro-alloys subsidiary. Chrome ore production rose by 49% to 371,000t after the restart of the Kalarangiatta mines and expanded environmental clearance at the Ostapal mine.
Ferro-chrome output increased by 21% to 101,000t. This matters because ferro-chrome is a critical input for stainless steel production, linking Vedanta’s chrome ore base to India’s alloy and steelmaking supply chain.
Copper cathode production at the Silvassa smelter rose by 15% to 170,000t. Vedanta attributed the increase to debottlenecking, operational efficiency and more diversified raw material sourcing, all of which improve supply resilience in a tight copper market.
The Metalnomist Commentary
Vedanta’s record output shows how Indian metals producers are using operational upgrades and mine restarts to increase domestic supply. The bigger strategic point is that India’s industrial growth needs integrated capacity across alumina, aluminium, zinc, ferro-alloys and copper, not only isolated production gains.

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