China’s exports of refined aluminium and related products dropped 9.2 per cent in the January to November period, amounting to 5.59 million tonnes. With domestic production expected to come in near the 45 million tonne annual cap, stronger demand from manufacturing and the energy sector has kept more metal at home, tightening global availability.
That scarcity has been clearly reflected in pricing. Benchmark LME aluminium price hit USD 2920 a tonne on December 5, its highest level since May 2022, and a 27 per cent jump from the year’s low of USD 2300 in early April. The rally has offered a rare boost to Western smelters, particularly in Europe and Australia, where high energy costs have ruined competitiveness in recent years.
If Beijing maintains its aluminium output cap through 2026, the global market may face even tighter conditions. How steel evolves will largely depend on the pace of China’s domestic recovery, particularly in construction. As long as the property sector remains weak, mills are expected to continue relying on exports or cutting older capacity. The original analysis also raises the question of whether steel could eventually mirror aluminium’s constrained outlook, should Beijing apply firmer production limits and domestic demand fail to rebound.