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Alcoa mulls more capacity cuts

Alcoa Wednesday reported stronger first-quarter earnings on growing demand from its aerospace and automotive operations, even as restructuring costs again weighed on results

US aluminum giant Alcoa said Friday that it is weighing more cutbacks in its smelting and refining operations worldwide in the face of weak prices.

Alcoa, which has been paring operations for more than a year, said it would review over the next year 500,000 tonnes of smelting capacity and 2.8 million tonnes of refining capacity "for possible curtailment or divestiture."

That could turn into a 14 percent cut in the company's global smelting capacity and 16 percent of its refining capacity.

Alco said currently 19 percent of its smelting capacity of 4.17 million tonnes sits idle.

The company did not indicate where the plants that face possible shutdown are located.

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"Alcoa continues to take decisive action, transforming its upstream portfolio to create a lower cost, globally competitive commodity business," said Bob Wilt, president of Alcoa's Global Primary Products division.

Aluminum prices have dropped about 30 percent since 2011, paralleling the slowdown in the economy of China, the key consumer.

At the same time, new refining and smelting capacity has come on line, especially in China, adding to the oversupply.