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Group and sources claim that the EU's export restrictions on aluminium scrap will be delayed until September.

European Aluminium, a sector lobby group and other industry sources have said that the European Commission has delayed its plans to introduce measures to limit exports of aluminum scrap until September.

Maros Sefcovic, European Trade Commissioner, announced plans to restrict scrap exports in November last year. He said that the measures would be implemented by spring 2026. According to one industry source, the delay was due to the difficulty in finding a compromise between competing interests.

The Commission didn't immediately reply to a comment request.

Recycling aluminium is a key factor in decarbonisation, as it uses 95% fewer energy resources than mining bauxite to produce metal.

European Aluminium, which represents producers who favor the export ban, reported that EU aluminium scrap exported reached a record 1,27 million metric tonnes in 2025. This was a 50% increase from the levels of 2019. The majority went to Asia, and the largest amount to India. Further increases were seen in the first quarter of 2026.

The report also noted that the United Arab Emirates' export ban, announced in June, would probably worsen the situation since India sources about 20% of its scrap metal from Gulf countries.

Paul Voss is the director general of European Aluminium. He said that he was looking forward to effective measures following the EU institutions' August break.

Recycling Europe is a group of industry professionals who oppose export restrictions. Recycling Europe's members include companies that shred products such as cars and extract?aluminium fragments which can be fed into melting plants.

The group claims that only 20% is actually exported, and that much of it is of a lower quality that cannot be handled within the EU.

The report said that restrictions could cause recyclers to reduce operations and cancel investments, resulting in significant amounts of recyclable materials remaining uncollected or unprocessed. (Reporting and editing by David Gregorio; Philip Blenkinsop)

(source: Reuters)