Rio Tinto to expand aluminum smelter with $1.4B investment using greener technology
Global News
The pending shutdown of Arvida is poised to impact between 300 and 350 employees. The new facilities will create 100 permanent jobs, Rio Tinto said.
Rio Tinto said Monday it will make a $1.4-billion investment to expand an aluminum smelter equipped with low-carbon technology in Saguenay, Que.
The Anglo-Australian metals and mining giant said it plans to build 96 new pots that use the greener AP60 smelter technology at its Jonquière Complex adjacent to the 97-year-old Arivda aluminum smelter.
The announcement could ease anxiety over jobs ahead of that plant’s closure in 2025, and gives more weight to Rio Tinto’s claim to being a producer of green aluminum, with the newer facilities emitting half the greenhouse gas emissions than the older potlines nearby.
“This is Rio Tinto’s largest investment in Quebec, but also in the West, for a decade,” Rio Tinto CEO Jakob Stausholm said at a news conference on Monday.
The company had built 38 AP60 tanks at the Jonquière Complex in 2013, but low aluminum prices prompted it to postpone a decision to add more.
The pending shutdown of Arvida is poised to impact between 300 and 350 employees. The new facilities will create 100 permanent jobs, Rio Tinto said.
However, the company has a project underway at its plant in Alma, Que. — about 40 kilometres upriver from Saguenay — which produces aluminum billets and aims to add 45 more jobs.
The potential development of Rio Tinto’s new carbon-neutral Elysis technology in the region could also require hiring.