Breaking: Mozal Aluminum Smelter to Cease Production on March 15, 2026

On December 16, 2025, South32, the Australian mining giant, officially announced that Mozal Aluminum Smelter in Mozambique – Africa’s second-largest electrolytic aluminum plant – will enter indefinite “care and maintenance” (de facto shutdown) starting March 15, 2026 . The six-year-long negotiations over electricity supply have collapsed, marking a critical turning point for global aluminum supply chains and trade dynamics.​

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1. Core Facts: Why Mozal’s Shutdown Is Inevitable​

Key Plant Profile​

Capacity & Status: Designed annual capacity of 750k tons, with actual output of 560k-580k tons (accounting for 0.7%-0.8% of global aluminum production) . It is Mozambique’s largest industrial employer and top export contributor.​

Ownership: South32 (63.7%), South African Industrial Development Corporation (32.4%), Mozambican Government (3.9%) .​

Economic Impact on Mozambique: Contributes 3% of national GDP, 10% of total exports (US$800M-1.1B/year), and directly employs 5,000 workers .​

The Fatal Standoff: Electricity Price Dispute​

After six years of negotiations, South32 and Mozambican authorities failed to reach a new power supply agreement (expiring in March 2026). The core deadlock lies in electricity pricing:​

Stakeholder​Demanded Tariff​Rationale​
South32​≤ US$70/MWh​Electricity accounts for 30%-40% of aluminum production costs; higher tariffs would push the plant into permanent losses .​
Mozambican Gov’t​US$91/MWh​Needs funds for energy infrastructure; insists on a “fair price” for national resources .​

Additional Risk Factors​

Power Supply Shortage: Drought reduced output at Cahora Bassa Hydroelectric Dam (HCB), which supplies 80% of Mozambique’s electricity .​

Political Instability: Post-election protests in late 2024 disrupted raw material transportation, eroding investor confidence .​

Supply Model Shift: The government mandated state-owned EDM as the sole power supplier, replacing HCB and adding uncertainty .​

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2. Global Aluminum Market Impact: Supply Gap & Price Dynamics​

Supply Shortage Takes Shape​

Mozal’s shutdown will cut global aluminum supply by ~580k tons in 2026, turning the previously projected 200k-ton deficit into a 600k-ton gap . For the EU – Mozal’s top export market – this means a 400k-ton import shortfall, further tightening regional supply .​

Price Trajectory: Bullish Momentum to Continue​

Current Trend: LME Aluminum prices have surged past US$3,000/ton, driven by pre-shutdown supply concerns .​

Institutional Forecasts: Analysts predict prices could break US$3,200/ton by Q2 2026 if other high-cost plants (e.g., U.S. Massena, Australian Rio Tinto smelters) face similar shutdown risks .​

Regional Premiums: Japan’s Q1 2026 aluminum premium already rose 126.7% YoY to US$195/ton (CIF), reflecting Asian spot tightness .​

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3. Implications for Aluminum Traders & Manufacturers​

Urgent Actions to Mitigate Risks​

Lock in Supply Contracts Early: Secure long-term deals with alternative producers in Indonesia, the Middle East, or South America to avoid price spikes .​

Adjust Pricing Strategies: Embed index-linked clauses in export contracts (e.g., LME price + regional premium) to offset cost volatility .​

Diversify Sourcing Channels: Explore Chinese overseas aluminum projects (e.g., Nanshan Aluminum’s Indonesia plant) or Middle Eastern capacity (powered by cheap natural gas) .​

Long-Term Opportunities​

Green Aluminum Demand: As high-carbon, energy-intensive plants shut down, low-carbon aluminum (powered by renewables) will gain competitive advantages in EU/US markets .​

Supply Chain Resilience: Invest in regional warehousing or dual-sourcing models to avoid disruptions from single-region outages .

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