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Emirates Global Aluminium

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Emirates Global Aluminium
NameEmirates Global Aluminium
TypePrivate
IndustryAluminium
Founded2013
HeadquartersAbu Dhabi
Key peopleSultan Ahmed Al Jaber
ProductsPrimary aluminium, ingots, billets, molten metal

Emirates Global Aluminium is a major aluminium producer based in Abu Dhabi, formed in 2013 through a merger that created one of the largest primary aluminium companies outside China. The company operates integrated smelters and a bauxite mine, supplying aluminium to sectors including aerospace, construction, transportation, and packaging. It engages with international markets, strategic partners, and regional development initiatives.

History

The company was established following the 2013 merger that combined the assets of Mubadala Investment Company and International Petroleum Investment Company—two Abu Dhabi investment entities—creating a consolidated aluminium producer with legacy operations dating to the 1970s and 1980s. Its antecedents include smelter projects associated with Abu Dhabi National Oil Company initiatives and industrialization policies tied to the United Arab Emirates' economic diversification programs. Over subsequent years the firm expanded through capacity upgrades at legacy sites and strategic investments linked to the Aviation sector and regional infrastructure projects such as those connected to Masdar and port developments at Khalifa Port. Key executive appointments involved figures from Abu Dhabi Global Market circles and leadership with experience at Royal Dutch Shell-affiliated ventures and multinational aluminium corporations like Rio Tinto and Alcoa.

Operations and Facilities

Operations center on integrated primary aluminium production with major smelters situated in the industrial zone of Taweelah and the industrial city of Mussafah near Abu Dhabi International Airport. The company’s value chain includes an alumina refinery historically linked to imports from suppliers such as Alunorte-style refineries and bauxite sources analogous to operations in Guinea and Australia. Logistics and export use transshipment through regional ports including Khalifa Port and connections to shipping lines active in the Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean. The firm operates power agreements and captive power arrangements linked to entities with ties to the UAE Power Sector and integrated utilities akin to Emirates Water and Electricity Company. Maintenance and engineering collaborate with contractors and equipment suppliers such as ABB, Siemens, and Gulf Craft-sized regional vendors.

Products and Production

The company produces primary aluminium, billets, slabs, foundry ingots, sow ingots, and molten aluminium for downstream rolling mills and extrusion plants. Product specifications align with standards referenced by bodies such as International Organization for Standardization and buyers in industries like Boeing and Airbus supply chains, regional fabricators supplying DP World-linked port equipment, and automotive suppliers servicing Jaguar Land Rover and Nissan assembly projects in the region. Production volumes have been influenced by global spot prices set on exchanges like the London Metal Exchange and trade flows impacted by agreements among countries in Gulf Cooperation Council markets. Processing technology incorporates prebake electrolytic cells, ISO-certified quality control laboratories, and casting lines similar to those used by multinational producers such as Hydro Aluminium.

Corporate Structure and Ownership

The company is privately held with major ownership stakes tied to Emirati sovereign investment vehicles, notably Mubadala Investment Company and other Abu Dhabi entities. Governance structures reflect board appointments that include representatives from regional investment holdings and oversight linked to state development plans like Vision 2030-style frameworks. Strategic partnerships and offtake agreements have been negotiated with international trading houses such as Glencore, Trafigura, and industrial consumers including ArcelorMittal-related supply chains. Corporate finance activities have engaged global banks and advisors from institutions like Goldman Sachs, HSBC, and Citigroup for refinancing and capital expenditure planning.

Environmental and Sustainability Initiatives

The company has pursued measures addressing carbon intensity, energy efficiency, and emissions reductions through initiatives analogous to partnerships with Masdar on renewable energy procurement and collaborations with technology providers focused on low-carbon aluminium development as promoted by programs similar to the International Aluminium Institute. Projects include energy-reduction retrofits at smelters, participation in industry decarbonization forums convened alongside stakeholders from COP meetings, and commitments to reporting frameworks inspired by Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures standards. Water management, waste reduction, and emissions monitoring follow protocols used by multinational metal producers and align with regulatory expectations set by Abu Dhabi environmental authorities and international lenders like the European Investment Bank.

Safety and Workforce

Workforce policies emphasize occupational health and safety systems comparable to ISO 45001 standards, training programs developed with technical colleges and institutes such as Khalifa University and Abu Dhabi Vocational Education and Training Institute. The company employs engineers, metallurgists, and technical staff with experience from firms like Alcoa, Rusal, and Norsk Hydro, and collaborates with labor regulators and trade associations similar to the International Labour Organization guidelines. Safety performance metrics and incident investigation procedures are benchmarked against multinational aluminium operations and rely on contractor management systems used by global industrial firms.

Market Position and Financial Performance

The company is a leading producer in the Middle East and a significant global supplier outside major producers in China and Russia; market share dynamics reflect competition with producers such as Alcoa, Rio Tinto, Rusal, and Norsk Hydro. Revenues and profitability are sensitive to aluminium prices on the London Metal Exchange, energy costs, and regional demand from construction and transportation sectors including projects associated with Expo 2020 Dubai and regional infrastructure development financed by entities like ADQ. Financial strategy includes capital expenditure geared toward capacity optimization, hedging arrangements executed with trading houses, and investor reporting aligned with international financial reporting norms practiced by global commodities firms.

Category:Aluminium companies