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Aluminum smelting and tariff architecture 2026: Section 232, the LME Russia ban, and the new premium geography
Primary aluminum links trade defense, sanctions enforcement, and a power constrained smelter map. We map the 71 million tonne supply system, the Section 232 stack, the LME Russia ban, and the 2026 to 2030 corridor.
Global primary aluminum production reached roughly 71 million tonnes in 2024 (IAI), with China near 43 million tonnes against its 45 million tonne cap, the GCC near 6, India above 4, Canada at 3, and Russia at 3.7 from Rusal. The trade system around that base has been rewritten in 24 months. The LME banned Russian metal produced after Apr...
Section 232 metals review 2026: steel, aluminum, and the next round
Eight years after Proclamations 9704 and 9705, the Section 232 framework on steel and aluminum is heading into a 2026 review that will reshape exclusions, expand product coverage, and tighten the seam with BIS export controls.
Section 232 tariffs of 25 percent on steel and 10 percent on aluminum have now operated for nearly a decade, evolving from blanket measures into a patchwork of country deals, tariff rate quotas, and product exclusions. The 2026 review window opens against a backdrop of persistent global overcapacity, sharper BIS export controls on critica...
The 2026 tariff playbook: layered overlays, real exposures
The 2026 US tariff regime is not one policy. It is six overlapping overlays stacked on top of MFN duties, with effective rates that depend on origin classification, content thresholds, and the antidumping order book. The interesting question is not the headline rate, it is which overlay binds for a given product and supplier.
By the spring of 2026 the US import-duty stack runs at least six overlays deep. Section 301 China duties remain in force at the post-September 2024 USTR review schedule, with EV duties at 100 percent and lithium-ion EV battery duties at 25 percent. IRA Section 30D and Section 48D rules have moved foreign entity of concern enforcement from...