The National - News

EGA aims to decarbonis­e operations as demand for green aluminium increases

- FAREED RAHMAN

Emirates Global Aluminium, the UAE’s biggest industrial conglomera­te outside the country’s oil and gas sector, is focused on decarbonis­ing its operations as it looks to tap into global demand for green aluminium.

The company, which produces about 2.7 million tonnes of aluminium every year, is developing its own technology to decarbonis­e its operations and reduce emissions, Salman Abdulla, executive vice president of HSSEQ (health, safety, sustainabi­lity, environmen­t and quality) at EGA, said at the Global Manufactur­ing and Industrial­isation Summit in Dubai.

“EGA has been developing its own technology, so if you look at past 10 or 15 years, the carbon intensity of our product has been continuous­ly reducing and this is something which we do by developing our own technology,” he said. The company aims to lower its emissions further in the next 10 to 15 years through “breakthrou­gh technologi­es” even as green sources of energy including hydrogen and solar become available for power generation, Mr Abdulla said.

EGA is also focusing on the supply chain part of its operations to ensure “they [suppliers] are aligned with the objectives of 2050 (on slashing emissions)”.

The UAE aims to become carbon neutral by 2050 with new investment­s worth Dh600 billion ($163.5bn) planned in clean and renewable energy sources over the next three decades.

EGA, which is jointly owned by Abu Dhabi’s strategic investment arm Mubadala Investment Company and the Investment Corporatio­n of Dubai, is also taking other measures as it continues to prioritise environmen­tal protection.

This year, it installed a 600megawat­t power plant at its manufactur­ing unit in Jebel Ali, which will help the company reduce emissions by 10 per cent in its operations as well as in power generation.

Demand for aluminium has been increasing as global economies recover from the coronaviru­s pandemic. Prices have jumped more than 25 per cent since the start of the year to trade at $2,668.50 per tonne at 3.45pm UAE time on Wednesday.

Demand has been “great”, Abdulnasse­r bin Kalban, chief executive of EGA, told the GMIS summit. “We can see recovery for all the aluminium products we are doing from Japan all the way to Peru. We cannot even sustain the demand and customers are asking for more and more green aluminium.”

EGA is also producing aluminium using solar power and signed a “triple-digit million-euro” deal with BMW to supply it with 43,000 tonnes of metal that will help the German car manufactur­er to cut 2.5 million tonnes of emissions over the next 10 years.

“The customer is very happy with it and they are asking for more,” Mr bin Kalban said.

EGA reported its strongest half-yearly results in 2021 after its earnings more than doubled from the same period a year earlier amid higher demand for its products and the global economic recovery.

Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortisati­on, or Ebitda, for the six months to the end of June climbed to Dh3.49bn.

This month, the company completed the expansion of Al Taweelah smelter in Abu Dhabi to boost output capacity at the plant by 78,000 tonnes per year.

This month, the company completed the expansion of Al Taweelah smelter in Abu Dhabi

 ?? EGA. ?? Emirates Global Aluminium intends to cut emissions and boost production for green aluminium
EGA. Emirates Global Aluminium intends to cut emissions and boost production for green aluminium

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