EGA Aluminium Recycling Strategy Expands With Eco Green Acquisition

EGA buys 80% of Italy’s Eco Green, expanding its global recycled aluminium platform.
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EGA Aluminium Recycling Strategy Expands With Eco Green Acquisition
EGA Aluminium Recycling

EGA aluminium recycling strategy has advanced with Emirates Global Aluminium agreeing to acquire an 80% stake in Italian aluminium recycler Eco Green. The deal strengthens EGA’s recycled aluminium footprint in Europe and adds another foreign recycling platform to its growing international network.

Eco Green operates near Verona in northeast Italy. The company collects, sorts and distributes around 23,000 t/yr of aluminium scrap, while its nearby casting facility produces more than 20,000 t/yr of secondary aluminium sows.

EGA aluminium recycling capacity will expand further because Eco Green is planning an additional 15,000 t/yr of recycled aluminium capacity at its casting facility. This gives EGA both existing production and near-term growth potential in the European secondary aluminium market.

The acquisition shows that EGA is moving beyond its traditional UAE-based integrated aluminium model. Instead of relying only on primary metal expansion, the company is buying recycling assets closer to scrap sources and downstream customers.

Eco Green Adds European Scrap and Casting Capacity

Eco Green gives EGA direct access to Italian aluminium scrap collection, sorting and secondary casting capacity. This is strategically important because scrap access is becoming a core competitive advantage in aluminium.

Secondary aluminium requires far less energy than primary aluminium. It also helps customers reduce embedded carbon in automotive, packaging, construction and industrial products.

The Verona-area location gives Eco Green access to Europe’s mature industrial scrap flows. Italy is one of Europe’s major manufacturing centres, which supports steady availability of post-industrial aluminium scrap.

The casting facility also gives EGA a route to convert collected scrap into secondary aluminium sows. This strengthens value capture because the business is not limited to scrap trading or sorting.

The planned 15,000 t/yr expansion will deepen that position. It should allow Eco Green to process more scrap internally and support EGA’s broader recycled aluminium supply targets.

EGA Builds a Global Secondary Aluminium Platform

The Eco Green deal follows EGA’s acquisition of German recycling company Leichtmetalle in 2024. EGA later announced an expansion of that facility, which will increase capacity more than six-fold.

EGA also bought a majority stake in US secondary aluminium smelter Spectro Alloys in 2024. Since then, it has announced two expansions that will lift Spectro’s total capacity to more than 200,000 t/yr of secondary aluminium ingots and billets, from 110,000 t/yr previously.

Following the Eco Green acquisition, EGA aluminium recycling capacity will total more than 400,000 t/yr across the UAE, Europe and the US. A further 200,000 t/yr is under development.

This creates a more diversified aluminium business. EGA can still rely on its primary aluminium base in the UAE, but recycling gives it lower-carbon growth in key consuming regions.

The strategy also responds to customer demand. Buyers increasingly want aluminium with lower carbon intensity, traceable scrap inputs and regional supply security.

For EGA, recycled aluminium acquisitions offer faster market entry than building new primary smelting capacity. They also reduce exposure to energy-intensive growth and place the company closer to circular aluminium supply chains.

The Metalnomist Commentary

EGA’s Eco Green acquisition confirms that global aluminium competition is shifting toward scrap control and secondary capacity. The winners in low-carbon aluminium will not only own smelters; they will own regional recycling networks close to customers.

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