
Emirates Global Aluminium (EGA), a leading regional producer, reported “significant damage” at its Abu Dhabi site following strikes by Iranian missiles and drones, while Aluminium Bahrain said it was assessing the extent of damage at its facility, where two employees were injured.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said it targeted the two facilities on Saturday in retaliation for attacks on two Iranian steel plants, claiming they had ties to US military and aeronautics firms.
Advertisement
The two smelters account for a combined 3.9 per cent of global aluminium production capacity, according to a Monday research note issued by China International Capital Corporation (CICC).
“The affected capacity represents a significant share, and any shutdown could lead to a pronounced supply-side contraction in the short term,” the note’s authors said, adding the impact could be long-lasting as “severe damage to production capacity might take years to restore”.
Advertisement
Safety concerns could further curb output in the Middle East, as aluminium smelting requires extremely high levels of operational continuity. Attacks increase the risk of unplanned shutdowns, power outages and disruptions to raw material supplies, raising the likelihood of plant closures or reduced operations, the note’s authors said.

Don't Miss:
-
China’s space start-ups eye IPO boom as SpaceX heads for record listing
-
China’s BYD claims Germany’s plug-in hybrid crown, disrupting market of iconic auto giants
-
Hacking of Philippine Senate’s website spotlights widening political crisis
-
Fury over Jared Kushner’s Albania resort project threatens to engulf political elite
-
China leads US in everyday AI apps but firms are overvalued, experts say

Singapore Clamps Down on Foreign Interference Involving South Asians
The Dark Side of Asia’s ‘Miracle Diet’
Thailand Seeks to Revive Its Peninsular White Elephant