European Aluminium suggests ban on Russia-origin aluminium and not on Rusal

Published: Mar 20, 2024 10:21
European Aluminium, a member-based industry association representing Europe's aluminium value chain, commands the European Union to impose sanctions on aluminium supplied from Russia and exclude EU-based companies owned by Rusal.

European Aluminium, a member-based industry association representing Europe's aluminium value chain, commands the European Union to impose sanctions on aluminium supplied from Russia and exclude EU-based companies owned by Rusal.

The European Union has been considering banning aluminium of Russian origin due to the geopolitical crisis between Russia and Ukraine. So far, the action has not come into effect but has not been completely discarded, given the volume of Rusal's aluminium supplies. In 2023, Rusal sold 4.2 million tonnes of aluminium, most of which was produced in Russia.

However, it should be noted here that European Union's imports of Russian primary aluminium have dropped since 2018. According to Trade Data Monitor, EU imported 512,122 tonnes of aluminium in 2023 that accounted for 8 per cent of the total imports compared to 12 per cent in 2022 and 19 per cent in 2018.

The European Union has banned aluminium wire, foil, tubes, and pipes supplied from Russia. But besides that, the major portion of exports, including primary metal, which accounts for 85 per cent of Russia's total aluminium exports, remain outside the scope of the measure, according to European Aluminium.

"The principle behind EU sanctions has been to try and do as much as possible to undermine the Russian war machine without creating harm to European industrial and by extension, societal interests," said Paul Voss, Director General of European Aluminium.

Source: https://www.alcircle.com/news/european-aluminium-suggests-ban-on-russia-origin-aluminium-and-not-on-rusal-110238

Data Source Statement: Except for publicly available information, all other data are processed by SMM based on publicly available information, market communication, and relying on SMM‘s internal database model. They are for reference only and do not constitute decision-making recommendations.

For any inquiries or to learn more information, please contact: lemonzhao@smm.cn
For more information on how to access our research reports, please contact:service.en@smm.cn
Related News
SHFE Aluminum Edged Up After Halting Its Decline, Spot Aluminum Stabilized and Improved [SMM South China Spot Aluminum Daily Review]
2 hours ago
SHFE Aluminum Edged Up After Halting Its Decline, Spot Aluminum Stabilized and Improved [SMM South China Spot Aluminum Daily Review]
Read More
SHFE Aluminum Edged Up After Halting Its Decline, Spot Aluminum Stabilized and Improved [SMM South China Spot Aluminum Daily Review]
SHFE Aluminum Edged Up After Halting Its Decline, Spot Aluminum Stabilized and Improved [SMM South China Spot Aluminum Daily Review]
2 hours ago
SHFE Cast Aluminum Alloy Warrants Drop by 2,047 mt to 42,944 mt on March 24
3 hours ago
SHFE Cast Aluminum Alloy Warrants Drop by 2,047 mt to 42,944 mt on March 24
Read More
SHFE Cast Aluminum Alloy Warrants Drop by 2,047 mt to 42,944 mt on March 24
SHFE Cast Aluminum Alloy Warrants Drop by 2,047 mt to 42,944 mt on March 24
[SMM Flash News] SHFE data showed that as of March 24, the total registered volume of cast aluminum alloy warrants was 42,944 mt, a decrease of 2,047 mt from the previous trading day. By region, the total registered volume was Shanghai (2,755 mt, down 422 mt), Guangdong (17,257 mt, down 210 mt), Jiangsu (4,209 mt, down 813 mt), Zhejiang (13,672 mt, down 483 mt), Chongqing (3,723 mt, down 119 mt), and Sichuan (1,327 mt, increase 0 mt).
3 hours ago
What Could Change if Middle East Aluminum Trade Reroutes—and Supply Becomes Substitutable
3 hours ago
What Could Change if Middle East Aluminum Trade Reroutes—and Supply Becomes Substitutable
Read More
What Could Change if Middle East Aluminum Trade Reroutes—and Supply Becomes Substitutable
What Could Change if Middle East Aluminum Trade Reroutes—and Supply Becomes Substitutable
Strait of Hormuz disruptions and Iran tensions are driving up aluminum prices and premiums. Aluminium Bahrain and Qatalum have cut output, while feedstock is tight. Rerouting via Port of Sohar or Saudi ports raises costs and delays. Buyers are turning to China, India, Russia, Canada, and scrap to offset risk. Prolonged disruption could reduce Middle East market share and reprice it as higher-risk supply.
3 hours ago
European Aluminium suggests ban on Russia-origin aluminium and not on Rusal - Shanghai Metals Market (SMM)