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Century's Iceland Aluminium Smelter will return sooner than expected

Century Aluminum, a U.S. aluminum producer, said that repairs will allow the shuttered capacity of its Grundartangi Smelter in Iceland to be restarted by the end April. This is six months earlier than previously expected.

Due to an electrical failure, the 320,000 metric ton?per year facility had to reduce production by two thirds at the end of October. This pushed up European Aluminium Premiums to a record high, currently $356 per ton, for the first time in a year. Century announced in November that it would take between 11 and 12 months to manufacture, ship, and install replacement transformers.

On a fourth quarter earnings call, Century CEO Jesse Gary stated that the good news is "we expect to be able repair some of damaged transformers and begin to restart Line 2 by the end of April. This is about six months earlier than we originally expected." Gary stated that "we still plan to install the new replacement transformers when they are finished, but are confident that we can return the line to near-full production in the meantime."

The CEO stated that the replacements will not arrive until the fourth-quarter due to the high demand for transformers from data centres. Century, which has built the first new U.S. aluminum smelter in Oklahoma since 1980 with Emirates Global Aluminium, sold this month its idled Hawesville site?in Kentucky, to data centre operator TeraWulf.

The Icelandic outage caused a 14% drop in Century's fourth quarter aluminium shipments. The company expects that annual shipments will?drop only 2.6% to 630,000 tonnes in 2026, with volumes from its Mt. Holly Project in South Carolina will see a rise in production with the restarting of 50,000 tonnes of capacity in April.

(source: Reuters)