Aluminum up

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Aluminum prices rose on Thursday as talks of fresh output curbs in top producer and consumer China fueled concerns about supply disruptions.

Three-month aluminum on the London Metal Exchange edged up 0.2 percent to $2,899 a ton, while the most-traded October aluminum contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange advanced 2 percent to 22,735 yuan ($3,534.07) a ton.

Both contracts have risen about 45 percent so far this year, hit by supply worries mostly from China.

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Aluminum producer Shaanxi Nonferrous Yulin New Material will have to reduce its output by 50 percent in September as part of energy consumption controls, according to a local government document posted by consultancy MySteel.

The company has a smelting capacity of around 600,000 tons per year. Shaanxi Nonferrous Yulin and a local government official were not immediately able to comment on the document.

China’s aluminum output in August slipped for a fourth straight month, as restrictions on metal production and power usage in key smelting hubs kept supply tight. — Reuters

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