ALFED highlights strategic importance of UK secondary aluminium at AIT Outlook 2026

ALFED highlights strategic importance of UK secondary aluminium at AIT Outlook 2026
Sustainability

On Tuesday 17 February 2026, the Aluminium Federation (ALFED) opened the AIT Outlook 2026 conference hosted by Aluminium International Today in London with a clear message: so-called “scrap” aluminium must be recognised as a strategic industrial resource central to UK growth, circularity and supply chain resilience.

Rachel Wiffen, ALFED Industry & Skills Development Manager, delivered a keynote address on The UK’s Secondary Aluminium Story, challenging the language and perception surrounding aluminium scrap and emphasising its true value as recycled, infinitely reusable material.

“Secondary aluminium is not waste,” Wiffen told delegates. “It is a circular, recycled aluminium product containing embedded energy, carbon and economic value. The terminology matters because policy perception follows language.”

Wiffen outlined how both pre-consumer (post-industrial) and post-consumer aluminium form essential feedstock for UK remelters and manufacturers. With secondary aluminium requiring up to 95% less energy than primary production, domestic scrap availability directly supports the UK’s net zero ambitions, industrial competitiveness and critical material security.

Her presentation explored rising global demand for recycled aluminium, driven by sustainability targets, carbon border mechanisms and evolving trade patterns. Recent US tariff decisions have increased the attractiveness of secondary aluminium exports, contributing to shifting scrap flows and heightened volatility in the UK market.

HMRC trade data shows the UK exported over 623,000 tonnes of secondary aluminium (HS7602) in 2025, compared with just under 90,000 tonnes imported, confirming the UK’s position as a significant net exporter. Exports to the United States have risen sharply in recent years, underlining how policy decisions in one market can rapidly reshape global trade flows.

Wiffen emphasised that while open markets remain important, scrap volatility presents a structural industrial risk. Domestic remelters face periods where exporting material is more profitable than processing it, particularly given ongoing energy cost pressures. This dynamic risks undermining long-term UK processing capability and weakening industrial resilience across automotive, construction, packaging and advanced manufacturing supply chains.

ALFED is therefore calling for secondary aluminium to be properly recognised within UK industrial and critical minerals policy. The Federation has formally requested representation at the Department for Business and Trade’s planned Scrap Roundtable to ensure aluminium-specific challenges are understood.

ALFED is not advocating blunt export restrictions. Instead, it supports proportionate, targeted measures that improve domestic circularity, enhance data visibility and strengthen long-term competitiveness. This includes consideration of greater trade code granularity whereappropriate, alongside mechanisms that protect high-value circular streams, while maintaining open markets.

A key theme of Wiffen’s address was the need for stronger evidence. Through its Recycling Sector Group, ALFED is working with recyclers, remelters and manufacturers to build a clearer aggregated picture of UK material flows, processing capacity and export dynamics.

This industry-led data initiative aims to provide Government with a more accurate understanding of where secondary aluminium is generated, how it moves through the system and where policy could support greater resilience.

“Aluminium has been recognised by NATO and the UK Government as strategically important,” Wiffen concluded. “If we are serious about critical material security, circular growth and industrial resilience, secondary aluminium must be treated accordingly. The story is still being written, and we want Government and industry to shape the next chapter together.”

ALFED will continue engaging with DBT officials in the lead-up to the Scrap Roundtable and will publish further insights from its Recycling Sector Group in the coming months.

For further information, please contact:

Aluminium Federation (ALFED)

alfed@alfed.org.uk

www.alfed.org.uk

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