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Commodities News

Up-to-date news on raw materials


FT Mercati provides subscribers with a dedicated commodities news bulletin to stay up-to-date.
Here is a selection of the latest news:

11/21/2025

INDONESIA - PT ALAMTRI TARGETS MID-DECEMBER FOR A NEW PLANT START

Indonesia’s strategic move to expand its domestic mineral processing continues with PT Alamtri Minerals Indonesia Tbk (ADMR) planning to start its new aluminium plant in North Kalimantan in mid-December. The facility, situated on the Island of Borneo, is set to become one of Indonesia’s large aluminium operations.
Alamtri director, Wito Krisnahadi, confirmed via text message that initial activities at the site would begin next month. Production will be scaled up gradually throughout next year, forming part of the planned commissioning phase. Krisnahadi added that the site is expected to reach its full annual output of 500,000 tonnes by October 2026.
Beyond the first phase, ADMR has outlined a longer-term objective to expand the North Kalimantan project so that its total yearly capacity rises to 1.5 million tonnes.
In 2023, Indonesia, despite being a major global supplier of bauxite, halted all exports of bauxite to steer investments into making alumina and aluminium within the country. The current development is nothing but a step towards that direction - to attain self reliance in alumina and aluminium production.

11/21/2025

EU - SLAB SUPPLY MAP TO SHIFT UNDER CBAM; BRAZIL, CHINA LIKELY WINNERS, RUSSIA MAYBE PRICED OUT (2)

But if the country’s emissions were calculated under default emission values, which are set at 3.21 tCO2 per tonne for direct emissions in the preliminary document, CBAM costs for Russia-origin slab would reach €190 ($219) per tonne, which would probably be unmanageable for re-rollers.
“The situation with Russian semi-finished materials is one of the most interesting under CBAM,” a buyer in Italy said. “It’s not clear how they will be able to verify their emissions, considering the continuation of the war they started in Ukraine, sanctions, and the tense relations with Europe.
“They probably rush bookings to get as much [steel slab] as possible delivered in the fourth quarter of 2025, to avoid CBAM. After that [the prospects are] unclear,” the buyer added.
NLMK, Russia’s largest steelmaker - which also owns steel re-rolling plants in Italy, Belgium, Denmark and France, declined to comment.

Vietnam, another major supplier, also has quite high default values, which might result in CBAM costs of €95 per tonne. Indonesia, with default values set at 8.23 tCO2e/t, will be completely out of the market unless it is able to provide actual emissions data.
In contrast, China and Brazil had manageable default values, which would result in quite modest CBAM costs.
Russian slab typically sits at the lower end of Italy’s import slab price assessment, and Chinese slab the top end.
Market sources suggested that Brazil was likely to increase slab deliveries to the EU, considering the competitive edge the country has with lower CBAM costs.
In fact, in the first nine months of 2025, the country supplied the bloc with 398,193 tonnes of slab, more than for the entire year of 2024 when it supplied 313,241 tonnes.

If a non-EU producer cannot provide verified emissions data, the CBAM regulation allows the use of default emission factors published by the European Commission, based on benchmark values or worst-case averages.
“Default emission values have a ‘punitive’ nature. They are set at a high level to encourage countries to cooperate and provide actual emissions data, which are usually below defaults,” a source in Europe said.
According to industry sources, the final set of default values will be published in early 2026 - probably in March or April - together with the final ETS benchmarks.
Until then, market participants face uncertainty over the exact emissions factors that will determine CBAM certificate obligations and import competitiveness.
(end)

11/21/2025

EU - SLAB SUPPLY MAP TO SHIFT UNDER CBAM; BRAZIL, CHINA LIKELY WINNERS, RUSSIA MAYBE PRICED OUT (1)

The rollout of the EU’s Carbon Broder Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) from the start of next year will probably reshuffle trade flows in the European import market for steel slab.
The largest supplier to date, Russia, was likely to lose that position even before the expiry of its quota, unless it should start to sell semi-finished materials using actual emissions values instead of default emissions values.
The European market has been digesting provisional benchmarks, outlined in a leaked draft document from the European Commission, on November 17.
In 2026, CBAM certificates will be calculated by quarterly average EU Emission Trading System (ETS) auction prices and the cost of embedded emissions with the CBAM material. From 2027, certificates will be calculated weekly.
To calculate embedded emissions, importers have the choice of using actual embedded-emission values, which use specific rates for the product and production route, or default values which are average embedded-emission intensities for each product and production route.
For steel products, provisional benchmarks have been considered “digestible” so far , but the major question was whether non-European suppliers would be able to verify their carbon emissions in a timely manner in order to avoid reporting under default values..
This was the “burning” question for European re-rollers, who heavily rely on imported steel slab.
Rerollers across Europe traditionally book steel slab overseas to use it for production of heavy plate and hot-rolled coil; therefore the uncertainty around CBAM costs has been one of the major topics discussed in the market over the past several months.
One plate-distributor source said that Italian rerollers in particular were “very much concerned that they will have big problems in the near future with CBAM,” which could put upward pressure on downstream plate prices at a time when steel customers were saying that it was hard to pass on costs and to shift demand away from slab imports to European slab-producing mills.
But, despite the potential for increased slab capacity in Europe, if demand for domestic slab were to rise, the same source said that domestically-produced slab could not make up for a significant loss in import supply.
“Slab is the biggest problem in this CBAM discussion,” the distributor source said. “because all the other mills in Europe are integrated - they produce their own slabs for their own rolling mills and their capacities are synchronized and, of course, they may not want to supply slab to Italian rerollers, whom they regard as competitors.”
But despite industry sources saying that European plate markets had reacted with nervousness over potential CBAM cost risks, they added that the leaked CBAM draft has raised more questions than answers for rerollers and their customers, emphasizing the provisional nature of the document.
One plate trader told that if the leaked draft figures become reality, it could limit slab-import suppliers to just China and Brazil - “which would be absurd in the case of China, because we put an AD duty on all their finished products.”
In 2024, the EU countries imported more than 5 million tonnes of steel slab [see table] and 61% of that - 3.1 million tonnes - was supplied by Russia.
Even though Russia-origin slab is subject to quota limits, European re-rollers still rely on Russian slab imports.

11/21/2025

BASKET OPEC PRELIMINARY PRICE

OPECNA, the news agency of OPEC, announced the OPEC Basket preliminary price
29 november = $ 64.43 /b (down from previous daily value)
(The OPEC Reference Basket (ORB) introduced on 16 June 2005, is currently made up of the following: Algeria, Angola, Congo, Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia , UAE and Venezuela.

11/21/2025

NEW PRICE FORECAST 2025-2026-2027- WORLD BANK

The international analysis company World Bank reports the estimated average price for lead in 2025, 2026 and 2027, updated according to its latest release in october:
2025 = $ 1,970 /tonn .
2026 = $ 1,975 /tonn
2027 = $ 2,000 /tonn
(Estimates are down from what was communicated in the previous release of april 2025)

11/21/2025

NEW PRICE FORECAST 2025-2026-2027- WORLD BANK

The international analysis company World Bank reports the estimated average price for zinc in 2025, 2026 and 2027, updated according to its latest release in october:
2025 = $ 2,800 /tonn .
2026 = $ 2,750 /tonn ,
2026 = $ 2,700 /tonn .
(The estimates are up from was communicated in the previous release in april 2025)