Arab Times

Norsk Hydro lacked waste license, says Brazil

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Brazilian authoritie­s said that Norwegian aluminum group Norsk Hydro failed to apply for a license to operate a new waste deposit at its key Alunorte alumina plant, the world’s biggest and now suspended as a result.

The company on Wednesday announced it had to stop production at the facility, located near the city of Belem in Brazil’s northwest. The news sent Norsk Hydro’s share price tumbling.

The Norwegian group has been under close scrutiny by Brazil. Earlier this year, Brazil accused it of contaminat­ing the waters of the nearby Baracena municipali­ty with bauxite residues suspected to have overflowed from a deposit basin after heavy rain.

Norsk Hydro denied any toxic spill took place, but Brazilian authoritie­s ordered production be halved.

The Alunorte plant, 92 percent owned by Norsk Hydro, produces around 10 percent of global alumina production, excluding that from China. The global price for aluminum, which is made from alumina, has already risen as a consequenc­e.

Temporaril­y closing the plant will weigh on Norsk Hydro’s results, which were already suffering from the months of setbacks with Brazilian officials. In a statement Thursday, Brazilian prosecutor­s said that Norsk Hydro should have known to apply for a license for the new waste deposit.

“If Hydro Alunorte knew that the useful life of its first waste deposit, called DRS1, was coming to an end, it should have scheduled the license applicatio­n for the second deposit, called DRS2,” the statement said.

 ??  ?? Norwegian aluminiumg­roup Norsk Hydro new logo can be seen at their headquarte­rs at Lysaker outside of Oslo, Norway on Oct 3. Norsk Hydro said it will suspend production at the world’s largest alumina plant in Brazil as it had not received authorisat­ion to use a new waste deposit area. (AFP)
Norwegian aluminiumg­roup Norsk Hydro new logo can be seen at their headquarte­rs at Lysaker outside of Oslo, Norway on Oct 3. Norsk Hydro said it will suspend production at the world’s largest alumina plant in Brazil as it had not received authorisat­ion to use a new waste deposit area. (AFP)

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