Latest News

China's aluminium production in 2025 will surpass 45 million tonnes

Data released by the government on Monday showed that China's aluminum production grew to 45 million metric tonnes in 2025. This is largely in line with a national output cap mandated by the government and represents a slower growth rate than in 2024.

The National Bureau of Statistics reported that the full-year production in the world's biggest consumer and producer of light metals rose by 2.4%, to 45.02 millions tons. This is a slower growth rate than the 4.6% in 2024.

The December production rose 3.0% year-on-year, to 3.87 millions tons.

The output was near the long-standing ceiling of 45 million tons per annum mandated by government in a broad effort to reduce oversupply.

Analysts at Citi stated in December that a strong growth in the?aluminium production in China is unlikely. Citing not only the 45-million-ton cap, but also tighter energy, environmental and carbon policies which have made aluminium melting in China "a poor investment".

In 2025, aluminium was the most expensive base metal. The benchmark three-month contract for aluminium on the London Metal Exchange rose by more than 17%, while Shanghai aluminium increased by more than 14%. This was due to supply concerns after China reached its production capacity limit.

China's nonferrous metal production, which includes copper, aluminum, lead, zinc, and nickel, rose by 4.9 percent to?7.21 millions metric tons in the month of December.

The output for 2025 increased by 3.9 percent to 81.75 millions metric tons. Other non-ferrous materials include tin and antimony. Mercury, magnesium, titanium, and mercury are also available. (Reporting and editing by Lewis Jackson, Dylan Duan, and Neil Fullick).

(source: Reuters)