Alcoa
to Iceland
Alcoa Board
of Directors has approved plans for a construction
of a 322,000-metric ton aluminum facility in
Eastern Iceland. Alcoa's Fjaršarįl aluminum
facility is part of the most extensive single
investment in the history of Iceland, and is
scheduled to begin production in 2007. The
facility is being designed to be the most
environmentally friendly aluminum production
facility in the world. The cost of the Fjaršarįl
aluminum facility will be approximately $1.1
billion over the next four years
Alcoa's Fjaršarįl aluminum operations -- Fjaršarįl
means "Aluminum of the Fjords" in
Icelandic and derives from the local municipality,
Fjaršarbyggš, or "Municipality of the
Fjords" -- will provide approximately 450
jobs and generate approximately 300 additional
full-time equivalent positions in service-related
industries, for a total of 750 new jobs.
Construction of the aluminum plant in East Iceland
is part of an overall economic plan by the
government of Iceland to improve living standards
from health care to infrastructure to
communications -- not just for the region, but
also for all of Iceland. Those new jobs will help
strengthen and diversify the economy of East
Iceland, which has seen declining employment and
out-migration as traditional jobs in fisheries and
farming have declined. The project will create
hundreds of construction jobs in the region,
helping fuel economic growth. Smelter construction
is scheduled to begin in early 2005.
The
project will comply with all air and water quality
standards of Iceland and the European Union
directives scheduled to take effect in 2005 and
2010. In some areas, designed performance of the
Alcoa plant goes beyond compliance. Carbon dioxide
(CO2) emissions will be 25% below the earlier
plan, and PFC emissions (another greenhouse gas)
will be 40% less. Emissions of nitrogen oxide
(NOX) will also be 80% less. Alcoa is committed to
working closely with East Iceland communities to
minimize disturbance during the construction and
operating phases.
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