@JorgeLiboreiro AA provides 25–35% of EU alumina refining capacity. Undermining Europe's largest refinery could increase EU reliance on imports from Australia, Brazil etc. while doing little to affect Russia's supply. Limerick loss would be to jobs, contractors, suppliers and local businesses.
@JorgeLiboreiro AA provides 25–35% of EU alumina refining capacity. Undermining Europe's largest refinery could increase EU reliance on imports from Australia, Brazil etc. while doing little to affect Russia's supply. Limerick loss would be to jobs, contractors, suppliers and local businesses.
@RachelMoiselle Russia can always get Alumina elsewhere, AA provides 25–35% of EU alumina refining capacity, bigger own goal if it closes. He is not a reporter, just a paid shill.
@realLangerDan Russia gets only around 10–15% of its alumina from Ireland. Russia can still buy more from China, India, Kazakhstan, Guinea or the Gulf, or Irish ore via a 3rd-party. The result is likely a shift in suppliers, not a loss of access to alumina.
@CaolanReports AA provides 25–35% of EU alumina refining capacity. Undermining Europe's largest refinery could increase EU reliance on imports from Australia, Brazil etc. while doing little to affect Russia's supply. Limerick loss would be to jobs, contractors, suppliers and local businesses.
@CaolanReports Russia gets only around 10–15% of its alumina from Ireland. Russia can still buy more from China, India, Kazakhstan, Guinea or the Gulf, or Irish ore via a 3rd-party. The result is likely a shift in suppliers, not a loss of access to alumina.