Garmco’s planned move to source aluminium from other smelters than Alba will not affect the firm’s expansion plan
The decision by Bahrain’s Gulf Aluminium Rolling Mill Company (Garmco) to stop using Aluminium Bahrain (Alba) as its sole supplier of aluminium potentially marks the end of an exclusive partnership that lasted for almost 30 years.
Garmco has said Alba will still supply its aluminium until 2012, but after that the company hopes to source its primary metal from both Alba and other smelters across the GCC.
With Garmco looking to diversify supply away from Alba, questions have been asked whether the Bahraini smelter can justify its expansion plans that will raise capacity to 1.2 million tonnes a year (t/y). The answer is yes.
The growth rate for primary aluminium is 5 per cent a year, which is about 2 million tonnes. Alba is planning to raise capacity by about 330,000 t/y so the tonnage it loses from Garmco’s 160,000 t/y rolling mill is not going to affect the company greatly.
Another important factor is Alba has almost 40 years of experience and sells its metal in markets across the world, as well as to the metals park that surrounds the smelter in Bahrain. They are hardly likely to hit the panic button.
From Garmco’s perspective, the move to diversify its supply comes as it is planning a $350m, 200,000 t/y rolling mill next to Sohar Aluminium’s smelter in Oman. If the firm is planning further expansion elsewhere then having a number of smelters in the region supplying it with metal is a logical next step.