Issues and Analysis on Prospects and problems of Aluminum industry in India in the current times for State General Knowledge (GK) Preparation

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    Prospects and problems of Aluminum industry in India in the current times

    Introduction:

    Covid-19 has spread to 211 countries, since its Outbreak in Wuhan in China, forcing imposition of lockdowns which have created much socio-economic disruption. Global losses are pegged at $9 trillion, and India is losing Rs 35,000 crore every day. This will adversely impact the entire metal industry, especially the world’s second most important metal, aluminium.

    Body:

    Status of Aluminium industry in India:

    • Aluminium Industry is the second most important metallurgical industry in India.
    • Aluminium has gained popularity as a substitute of steel, copper, zinc and lead.
    • Some of its unique properties like lightweight, recyclability, conductivity, non-corrosiveness and durability have helped establish it as a metal of choice for various applications across   various   segments   of   the   manufacturing
    • Aluminum is also called ‘the Metal of Future’ due to the above properties.
    • There are 8 aluminium smelting plants in the country located in Odisha (Nalco and Balco), West Bengal, Kerala, Uttar Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu.
    • Aluminum Consumption in India at 2.5kg per capita is much below the global average of 11kg per capita.
    • Globally, auto & transport account for 23% of aluminum consumption, followed by construction (22%), packaging (13%), electrical (12%), machinery and equipment (8.5%), consumer durables (4.5%), and other segments (4%)

    Prospects:

    • The aluminium industry has a high multiplier for job creation. Every job in primary production creates two more in the downstream and upstream industries.
    • The industry provides livelihood to over 8 lakh people and every 1 mn tonne addition creates an additional 2 lakh livelihood opportunities.
    • Even at its low consumption, aluminium contributes 2% of manufacturing GDP (steel 12%, cement 9%) and provides nearly 800,000 jobs.
    • This growth is critical for India’s vision of achieving 25% of GDP from manufacturing by 2022.
    • Aluminium is the most apt industry for creating livelihoods to achieve the coveted V-shaped recovery from ~2% to ~7% by next year.
    • It will be a key contributor to ‘Make in India’, National Capital Goods Policy, setting up of smart cities and the goal of 100 GW solar capacity by 2022.
    • A country’s over-reliance on foreign imports for essential strategic metals may be detrimental towards the objective of economic and national security.
    • Many industrialised nations have included non-ferrous metals/aluminium industry as a strategic sector in their industrial strategy.
    • The U.S. Department of Defense considers aluminum a strategic metal for maintaining effective military capabilities
    • Given its high availability in India, it would greatly contribute to economic growth
    • If properly utilized, many backward States can become financially healthier, leading to development
    • China is a leader in solar equipments which use high quantity of aluminium. It is used in wind farms too. Given India’s ambitious INDCs, aluminium remains a key metal with its importance increasing day by day

    Problems:

    • With a gloomy global forecast and Chinese smelters continuing operations, there will be an inventory glut. End-users are cancelling contracts for primary aluminium in Europe and North America, contracting demand by 5 mn tonnes.
    • India’s GDP forecast falling to 2% (from 6%) will impact aluminium demand in the construction, transport, and electrical sectors. Aluminium demand will decelerate by 40-50% unless enough stimulus is given—an SOS call of the aluminium industry.
    • Global recession, shrinking markets in the western hemisphere, and semi-finished products through FTA countries like Malaysia and Thailand spell trouble for Indian aluminium exports.
    • Dumping of aluminium into India by China has posed a serious risk to the domestic industry. China provides very cheap power and various subsidies to the industry, which India cannot afford to provide at this moment
    • Even if various import duties are levied, aluminium imports are recalibrated as semi-furnished products, nullifying the effect of duties
    • India’s own aluminium consumption will recover slowly post FY22, to reach ~6-7 mn tonnes by 2025.
    • Aluminium industry is also affected by poor infrastructure in India when compared to leading producers across the world.
    • Lack of availability of cheap power in the country
    • Internal problems like labor unrests, environmental regulations and tribal issues like Dongria Kondh of Niyamgiri vs Vedanta Resources

    Measures needed:

    • Tariff support recommendations for aluminium MSMEs:
      • Immediately impose minimum import price and/or quantitative restriction on imports safeguard our MSMEs from cheap imports by increasing import duty
      • To be globally competitive, enhance the MEIS scheme from 2% to 5% for all aluminium products under Chapter 76, and implement the RoDTEP (remission of duties or taxes on export products) scheme expeditiously.
    • Financial measures:
      • Extend RBI’s moratorium to non-convertible debentures and other commercial papers, for both principal and interest
      • Waiver/moratorium on all statutory payments (electricity duty, royalty on coal and minerals, coal cess, and on renewable purchase obligation) for next two years, to support highly power-intensive industries like aluminium.
    • Role of industries:
      • Industry, along with the government stimulus, should promote MSMEs and downstream industries.
      • Aluminium parks developed by Nalco and Vedanta will increase value addition, mentor MSMEs, lending brand names to market end products.
      • Other industries can also introduce cashless model for MSMEs to give input material and buy back end-use products.
      • This will be mutually beneficial—spreading industrialization, creating employment, and developing MSMEs.

    Conclusion:

    India’s growing economic might enables it to produce enough high-quality aluminium to ensure self-reliance in defence and critical infrastructure, and avoid global volatility in supply and prices. A National Aluminium Policy will be an important step forward. With all ingredients of competitive raw material availability (bauxite and coal), best-in-class manpower, and value addition through MSMEs, India has the potential to be self-sufficient and become a global manufacturing hub of aluminium, and can be a strong substitute to China.


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