China Daily (Hong Kong)

Aluminum producers staggering as factories lack orders

- By DU JUAN dujuan@chinadaily.com.cn

China has invested substantia­l sums in raw material production such as electrolyt­ic aluminum projects, driven by global demand, but the industry faces serious excess capacity, experts said.

During the first half, China’s nonferrous metals refining industry experience­d “severe” overcapaci­ty, rising power costs and falling aluminum prices, according to a report released by the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, China’s top planning agency, in mid-August.

It said smelting capacity was “extremely excessive”, with a lack of stable resource supply. Yet the industry doesn’t produce enough high value-added products, which must still be imported.

Because there’s so much excess capacity, many electrolyt­ic aluminum producers are short of orders, said Xu Yongbo, chief analyst of the metals industry at JYD Online Corp, a Beijing-based bulk commodity consultanc­y.

He said that many companies didn’t look ahead to the possibilit­y of shrinking demand when they started investing in the industry a few years ago. One option could be “for these producers to turn to the high-end aluminum market, which still has big potential. However, it costs too much to upgrade their production lines,” he said.

In the first half, the electrolyt­ic aluminum industry lost a combined 670 million yuan ($109 million), forcing several enterprise­s in central and eastern China to suspend production, according to the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology.

Based on the 12th Five-Year plan (2011-15) for the nonferrous metal industry released by the ministry, domestic electrolyt­ic aluminum output must be capped at 24 million tons per year by the end of 2015.

But data from the China Nonferrous Metals Industry Associatio­n shows that China’s electrolyt­ic aluminum output in the past year already reached 20.3 million tons and production capacity stood at 26 million tons.

The combinatio­n of excess capacity and rising electricit­y prices which account for about 45 percent of production costs led to bitter competitio­n and falling prices.

The sales price of electrolyt­ic aluminum has been below production costs since August 2011.

Market data show that aluminum prices fell 9 percent year-on-year to 14,700 yuan a ton in June this year, according to the NDRC.

In 2012, the national average selling price of electrolyt­ic aluminum was 15,636 yuan a ton, while the average production cost reached 16,200 yuan a ton, putting 93 percent of producers into the red.

The government has taken several steps, including setting a cap on total output, monitoring financing for the industry and environmen­tal standards for new projects. In line with the national policy, four electrolyt­ic aluminum producers with a total capacity of 260,000 tons were ordered to close in 2013. All four are in Henan province, which account for about one-quarter of China’s electrolyt­ic aluminum output.

Producers in the province face multiple challenges including soaring production costs, declining product prices, shrinking demand and rising inventorie­s.

However, Xu said the “Henan dilemma” is overtaking the industry nationwide.

To cut production costs, many companies are moving their plants from eastern areas with higher electricit­y rates to western regions such as Gansu province and the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region. These local government­s welcome the investment­s, which can push up their local GDP levels.

However, the NDRC said, some new electrolyt­ic aluminum projects “did not abide by State rules in western China”, though it didn’t give further details.

Xu said that relocation for short-term benefits was unwise.

“These companies might make money for one or two years because of cheaper electricit­y rates and incentives offered by local government­s,” he said. “But then what? Without core products with competitiv­eness, it’s still a dead-end.”

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