Commodities March 4, 2026

Gulf Supply Disruptions Push Aluminium Higher as Regional Unrest Takes Toll

QatarEnergy shutdown at Qatalum and constrained shipping through Strait of Hormuz raise questions about whether recent price gains are temporary or longer-lasting

By Caleb Monroe
Gulf Supply Disruptions Push Aluminium Higher as Regional Unrest Takes Toll

Aluminium jumped 3.8% to $3,315 per tonne after QatarEnergy stopped output following retaliatory strikes linked to the recent escalation in the region. The shutdown at Qatalum, limited alumina inventories at Gulf smelters and shipping risks around the Strait of Hormuz have amplified concerns about near-term availability and the potential for a sustained market rebalancing.

Key Points

  • Aluminium rose 3.8% to $3,315 per tonne after QatarEnergy halted production following regional strikes.
  • Qatalum - a joint venture involving Qatar state aluminium producer and Norsk Hydro - has started a controlled shutdown; a full restart could take six to twelve months. Qatalum's nameplate capacity is 636,000 tonnes.
  • Gulf supply risks threaten European and U.S. downstream markets because the region accounts for about 30% of European aluminium imports and over 20% of U.S. aluminium imports; limited alumina stocks and constrained shipping through the Strait of Hormuz heighten exposure.

Aluminium prices spiked 3.8% to $3,315 per tonne after QatarEnergy halted production in the wake of Iranian retaliatory strikes that closed its main LNG plant. The sequence of events followed U.S.-Israeli airstrikes that killed Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, with the subsequent regional attacks affecting an area that accounts for roughly 8% of global aluminium output, according to ING Research.

The immediate operational impact centered on Qatalum, a joint venture between Qatar's state aluminium producer and Norsk Hydro. The plant initiated a controlled shutdown, and company statements indicate a full restart could require six to twelve months. Norsk Hydro has issued force majeure notices to customers in response to the halt.

Qatalum's nameplate capacity is 636,000 tonnes. Emirates Global Aluminium said it was drawing on offshore inventories to manage delays in vessel loading as the disruption unfolds.

Vulnerability in the Gulf extends beyond the direct effects of the strikes. ING Research notes that regional smelters typically hold only around three to four weeks of alumina inventories. The Gulf supplies just 3% of global alumina and 1% of global bauxite, leaving producers exposed if shipping through the Strait of Hormuz is constrained.

Europe appears to face the most acute downstream exposure. The Gulf accounts for approximately 30% of European aluminium imports, predominantly material from the UAE, and primary aluminium availability had been tight even before the recent escalation. The United States also has exposure: the Gulf supplies over 20% of U.S. aluminium imports, although tariff-inflated Midwest premiums are limiting immediate upside in that market.

The disruption is arriving against a market already projected to be in deficit. ING Research had signaled a supply shortfall of about 600,000 tonnes for 2026 before considering any additional Middle East risk. Factors cited as weighing on supply include China's capacity cap, trade dislocations and the imminent closure of the Mozal smelter.

Market activity has already reacted. On Tuesday, orders for LME warehouse metal rose to their highest levels since September, concentrated on Malaysian material.

Analysts identify demand as the principal downside risk. A prolonged conflict could dampen industrial activity and cause demand destruction; however, ING Research judged the balance of risks to be skewed to the upside if disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz persist.

Whether the recent price move is a short-lived spike or a more permanent structural shift will depend largely on how long shipping through the strait remains impaired.

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Risks

  • Prolonged regional conflict could reduce industrial activity and cause demand destruction, affecting downstream users and industrial sectors.
  • Continued impairment of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz would exacerbate supply constraints for aluminium and related inputs, impacting smelters, importers and commodity markets.
  • Supply-side pressure from an existing projected 2026 shortfall of roughly 600,000 tonnes, combined with China’s capacity cap, trade dislocations and the imminent Mozal smelter closure, could amplify price volatility in metals markets.

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