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Industry group warns that the UK's defence and auto supply chains are threatened by the escalating scrap aluminum exports

Manufacturing trade body Make UK warned that the soaring exports of scrap?aluminum could leave Britain without a critical material required for defence, digital technologies, clean energy and the automotive industry.

The UK could face a serious crisis if scrap exports continue to increase, as industry moves abroad to find better scrap markets. This puts jobs, investments and supply chain resilience at risk.

Make UK stated that domestic industry may need up to 6 million metric tonnes of "available scrap" for recycling in order to meet the 8 million tonne aluminium demand projected by 2035 under the government's "Critical Minerals Strategy" and Modern Industrial Strategy.

Daniel Paterson said that the UK Aluminium (Scrap) Collection and Sorting?needs to grow by 25 percent each year.

This important opportunity will be lost if UK continues to export critical materials that are essential for our future growth sectors, national security, and resilience.

Data from the information provider Trade Data Monitor shows that UK exports of aluminum waste and scrap reached 624,314 tons in 2016, a 43% increase from 2016. In the same time period, UK scrap aluminium shipments to India increased by 94%.

The UK's aluminium scrap exports in the United States reached 23,560 tonnes last year, a jump of 989% since 2024.

Make UK stated in a press release that "UK exports increased dramatically to the U.S. after Section 232 Tariffs excluded aluminium scrap from their scope."

In June of last year, U.S. president Donald Trump imposed tariffs of 50% on aluminum imports.

Make UK called on the government to invest in sorting and preprocessing capabilities in the UK, for stronger standards of collection and enforcement and targeted measures that would keep certain alloys of aluminium in Britain. It also called on the government to "engage urgently" with the EU in order to "secure equal treatment" if Brussels introduced aluminium scrap export restrictions.

After warning that scrap exports could leave EU metals industries without material for recycling and decarbonisation, the European Commission has begun to develop measures to reduce aluminium scrap leaving Europe.

(source: Reuters)