Aluminium demand declines in North America

European Aluminium

The Aluminum Association released preliminary estimates as part of its monthly Aluminum Situation statistical report that show a 4.4% year-over-year decline in aluminium demand for North America (U.S. and Canada) through H1 of 2025. 

While a significant decline in exports was a main contributor to the overall contraction, demand fell in all market segments, with the exception of foil.

“We are carefully monitoring the market as more data becomes available on how the current tariff landscape is impacting the industry,” said Charles Johnson, president & CEO of the Aluminum Association. 

“As we look ahead, it’s critical to ensure trade policies support — not strain — the US aluminium industry. With 98% of American aluminium jobs in the mid-and downstream sectors, we need a more targeted trade approach that protects against unfair practices while keeping America’s aluminium industry strong and competitive.”

Among key takeaways from the report:

  • Aluminium demand in the United States and Canada (shipments by domestic producers plus imports) totalled an estimated 13,101 million pounds through June 2025, declining 4.4 percent from the like-2024 total of 13,706 million pounds
  • The association’s Domestic Producers Shipments & Inventories report indicates that producer shipments from U.S. and Canadian facilities decreased 4.5% year-over-year through June. This number excludes imports to more clearly reflect industry aluminium and aluminium product shipments by North American firms.
  • The decline in domestic producer shipments was driven primarily by a decline in aluminium mill products, which contracted 1.6% while shipments of aluminium ingot for castings, exports and destructive uses declined 11% year-over-year.
  • Aluminium scrap inventory increased 14.7% so far in 2025, driven by tariff policy that is incentivising the use of scrap.
  • Imports of aluminium and aluminium products into North America increased 15.8% year-over-year in the first half, entirely driven by imports of unwrought aluminium.
The Aluminum Association released its latest report

The US aluminium industry invested more than $10 billion in U.S. operations over the past decade, powered by strong demand, strategic trade enforcement and a stable policy environment. 

The Trump administration has consistently acknowledged aluminium’s critical role in both economic and national security. However, the administration’s universal 50% aluminum tariff risks undoing hard-earned gains and jeopardises a decade of progress. The Aluminum Association has called on policymakers to pursue a more focused, targeted approach to trade—one that strengthens the domestic industry without disrupting the 98% of industry jobs that rely on access to affordable aluminium inputs.

The Aluminum Situation report is one of more than two-dozen ongoing industry statistical reports developed exclusively by the Aluminum Association through surveys of aluminium producers, fabricators and recyclers. 

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