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Low-carbon aluminium a key ingredient to deliver Japan’s Green Growth Strategy

Press releases

26

october, 2021

Research by En+ Group shows major opportunity for Japanese businesses from path to net zero but highlights low-carbon materials are needed to support growth.

En+ Group (LSE: ENPL; MOEX: ENPG), together with its metals segment, RUSAL, has today published research that stresses the critical role of low carbon aluminium as a part of Japan’s Green Growth Strategy, underpinning the green energy transition and the further evolution of the circular economy.

Drawing on market data, the paper shows a projected 20% increase in demand for aluminium semis from businesses in Japan between 2020 and 2025. While Japan benefits from almost 100% recycling rates for cast aluminium products, primary aluminium will still be required to meet more than 50% of forecast demand. The paper warned that the high energy intensity of aluminium production means raw materials imported into Japan can have vastly different embedded emissions based on the power sources used. Primary aluminium produced using renewable energy, for example, can have an emissions intensity of less than 4 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of aluminium (tCO2/tAl) (Scope 1&2) compared to a global average of 12.6 tCO2/tAl (Scope 1&2).

Researchers for En+ Group advise Japanese industry of the necessity to create ‘cradle to gate’ partnerships that pull through low carbon aluminium products, whilst supporting research and development, design for sustainability and circularity, and investment in low carbon innovations.

In addition, the paper proposes the government consider the use of foreign development funding to support low-carbon supply chains for Japanese businesses, whilst extending the existing emission-linked import duties to materials that include high volumes of coal or oil during production.

Commenting on the research, Steve Hodgson, International Sales Director of RUSAL, said:

“Japanese manufacturers under pressure to reduce their climate impacts have the opportunity to source aluminium with significantly lower embedded emissions. At the same time, the simple act of requiring emissions disclosure against a common global framework, will further enhance confidence in aluminium as the material of choice in a carbon constrained future.”

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