RPT-COLUMN-Sustainability the new battleground for aluminium producers: Andy Home

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* Aluminium Production by Power Source: https://tmsnrt.rs/2P737Hx

By Andy Home

LONDON, Oct 22 (Reuters) - Another year, another portfolio review by Alcoa.

The U.S. aluminium producer has just announced a five-year review of around 4.0 million tonnes of alumina capacity and 1.5 million tonnes of smelter capacity.

Assets will be improved, curtailed, closed or sold.

It's not quite an annual event but Alcoa shareholders have been here many times before as the company keeps trying to move down the cost curve in the face of chronically depressed prices.

On the London Metal Exchange (LME) three-month aluminium has ground steadily lower over the course of 2019 and at a current $1,720 per tonne is close to the near three-year low of $1,705 recorded earlier this month.

This time around, however, Alcoa is throwing an extra ingredient into the cost-cutting mix - sustainability.

The company "expects to be the lowest emitter of carbon dioxide among all global aluminum companies".

Going green is the new differentiator in the cut-throat business of making aluminium.

GREEN POWER

Aluminium is one of the metals expected to benefit from the "green revolution" given its recyclability and light-weighting potential in the automotive sector.

However, its green credentials have recently come in for some serious scrutiny.

The part suspension of the Alunorte alumina refinery in Brazil last year and closures in China this year have served as a reminder that aluminium has its own tailings dam issues, a sensitive topic after the devastating dam failure at Vale's Brumadinho iron ore mine.

Moreover, aluminium is only as "green" as the power source used to make the stuff, particularly since power is such an important input in the aluminium smelting process.

Alcoa is hoping to leverage its existing strengths on both fronts.

Its entire production chain is certified by the Aluminium Stewardship Initiative, it boasts "the lowest carbon footprint of any (alumina) refining system in the world" and is one of the lowest emitters among major aluminium producers.

Around 70% of the electricity powering its smelters comes from renewable sources, a ratio that Alcoa hopes will rise to around 85% after its portfolio review.

BLACK ALUMINIUM

Alcoa has the advantage of being based in North America, which thanks to Canada's massive hydroelectric dam system has one the highest renewable energy profiles of any major producing region.

Hydro power accounted for 82% of North American aluminium production last year, according to the International Aluminium Institute (IAI).