Cayman Aluminium (Sanmenxia) Co Ltd, a new alumina producer in
China, is already expanding its capacity, a company official said
yesterday, which will potentially reduce the country's imports of
the commodity.
China is the world's top buyer of spot alumina, from which
aluminium is made, and imports nearly 40 percent of its
alumina.
Cayman started producing alumina last month from its refinery,
which has 400,000 tons of capacity. The facility will eventually
house three such units of equal capacity, one of which the company
this week started building, according to the official. "We used 18
months to finish the first unit. The second one should be done
within this year," the official said. He did not say when the third
400,000-ton unit would be built.
Cayman planned to invest 4.6 billion yuan (US$570 million) for
the entire 1.2 million-ton-a-year refinery, the official said.
The company operates a mine in Sanmenxia city in Central China's
Henan Province and will produce at least 400,000 tonnes of alumina
in 2006.
Analysts see China's alumina production jumping nearly 30
percent to 11 million tonnes this year, from about 8.5 million tons
in 2005.
Prices of spot alumina in China have risen 28 percent over the
past year to about 6,100 yuan (US$753) a ton, supported by strong
demand from the country's expanded aluminium capacity and high
world prices.
Robust prices are prompting existing refineries to expand
capacity and investors to build new refineries in the country.
Under current planned projects, nearly 12 million tons of
alumina capacity was likely to be built, of which 6.4 million tons
would come on stream between 2005 and 2006, according to China
Nonferrous Metals Industry Association.
Aluminum Corp of China Ltd is the country's dominant alumina
producer, whose capacity will rise to 12 million tons by 2010 from
8.5 million last year.
Other Chinese alumina refineries, including Cayman, that had
combined capacity of one million tonnes in 2005 will boost capacity
to 5 million tons by 2010.
Cayman is owned by the privately-held Hangzhou Jinjiang Group in
east China's Zhejiang Province.
Jinjiang intended to build an aluminium smelter in Shizuoshan
city in northern China's Ningxia Autonomous Region, said an
official for the group. "We signed a letter of intent with the
local government in December," he said.
(China Daily January 12, 2006)