Adv
LANGUAGES
English
Hindi
Spanish
French
German
Chinese_Simplified
Chinese_Traditional
Japanese
Russian
Arabic
Portuguese
Bengali
Italian
Dutch
Greek
Korean
Turkish
Vietnamese
Hebrew
Polish
Ukrainian
Indonesian
Thai
Swedish
Romanian
Hungarian
Czech
Finnish
Danish
Filipino
Malay
Swahili
Tamil
Telugu
Gujarati
Marathi
Kannada
Malayalam
Punjabi
Urdu
AL CIRCLE

Indonesia’s rising aluminium output threatens the $3,000 price outlook for 2026

EDITED BY : 3MINS READ

JPMorgan expects aluminium price may get close to USD 3,000 per tonne in early 2026, helped by stronger copper prices and a market that, for now, looks reasonably tight. But several analysts say the outlook becomes much less straightforward once Indonesia’s new supply starts landing, and that may happen faster than the market is prepared for.

Indonesia’s rising aluminium output threatens the $3,000 price outlook for 2026

{alcircleadd}

For years, Indonesia has talked about becoming a major aluminium producer. What’s different now is that many of the long-promised projects are actually close to starting up. Smelters, refineries and upstream investments are advancing at the same time, creating a level of momentum that could reshape the regional market.

Two of the projects — backed by Bintan Alumina Indonesia and Borneo Alumina Indonesia — are pushing the country’s alumina output toward a possible 7 million tonnes a year. On the metal side, Indonesia’s primary aluminium production may almost double in 2026, rising from around 815,000 tonnes to about 1.6 million tonnes, with several China-supported potlines expected to switch on in the second half of the year. That timing is important: the extra tonnes arriving later in 2026 are likely to put a lid on the price rally many traders are eyeing for Q1. Some forecasts see the year ending closer to USD 2,650 per tonne, with an annual average near USD 2,800.

The state-owned mining group MIND ID is a central part of this shift. Its new smelter in Mempawah—roughly 600,000 tonnes per year—is one of the biggest industrial builds underway in West Kalimantan. When paired with INALUM’s existing operations, Indonesia aims to reach roughly 900,000 tonnes of state-linked smelting capacity by 2029.

Private developers are just as active. Adaro Minerals is constructing a renewable-powered smelter in the vast North Kalimantan Green Industrial Park. The first metal is targeted for late 2025, starting at about 500,000 tonnes and later ramping toward 1.5 million tonnes. Adaro’s aluminium arm, PT Alamtri Indo Aluminium, recently put in around USD 300 million to keep work moving.

Also read: The World of Aluminium Extrusions – Industry Forecast to 2032

The upstream picture is shifting, too. Indonesia plans to bring three alumina refineries online in 2025, followed by three more by 2027, which would multiply the country’s processing capacity several times over. MIND ID’s SGAR Phase I refinery, currently running at 1 million tonnes, consumes more than 3 million tonnes of bauxite each year. A second phase will add another 1–2 million tonnes, supported by reserves such as the Mempawah deposit.

All this investment ties back to Indonesia’s long-term industrial plan. Demand for aluminium inside the country is expected to surge—possibly sixfold over the next 30 years—as electric vehicles, solar manufacturing and other downstream sectors take shape. Reducing reliance on imported materials has become a key theme for policymakers.

With so much capacity heading toward completion, Indonesia is stepping into a far more influential role in the global aluminium market. Prices may edge higher going into 2026, but the country’s rapid build-out means the second half of the year could look very different from the first.

Explore our B2B marketplace - AL Biz

Adv
Adv
Adv
Adv
Adv
Adv
Adv
EDITED BY : 3MINS READ

Responses

Adv
Adv
Adv
Loading...
Adv
Adv
Adv
Loading...
Reports VIEW ALL
Loading...
Loading...
Business Leads VIEW ON AL BIZ
Loading...
Adv
Adv
Would you like to be
featured with us?
Loading...

AL Circle News App
AL Biz App

A proud
ASI member
© 2025 AL Circle. All rights reserved. AL Circle is not responsible for content from external sources.