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Kaiser Aluminum

Kaiser Aluminum Corporation is an American aluminum producer. It is a spinoff from Kaiser Aluminum and Chemicals Corporation, which came to be when common stock was offered in Permanente Metals Corporation and Permanente Metals Corporation's name was changed to Kaiser Aluminum and Chemicals Corporation.[6]

Kaiser Aluminum
FormerlyKaiser Aluminum and Chemical Company
Company typePublic
Nasdaq: KALU
S&P 600 Component
IndustryAluminum
Founded1946 in Washington state, U.S.
HeadquartersFranklin, Tennessee, U.S.
Key people
Keith A. Harvey –  President and Chief Executive Officer
ProductsRolled aluminum, plate, sheet, can sheet, and extruded products.
Revenue US$1.173 billion (2020) [1]
US$ 29 million (2020) [2]
Total assets$1.865 billion (2020) [3]
Number of employees
3,700 (2021) [4][5]
SubsidiariesAnglesey Aluminium, Imperial Machine & Tool, Kaiser Warrick, LLC
WebsiteOfficial website

History edit

 
A former Kaiser Aluminum plant (1972) next to the Huey Long Bridge in Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Founded in 1946, Henry J. Kaiser's corporation entered the aluminum business by leasing, then purchasing three government-owned aluminum facilities in Washington state. These were the primary reduction plants at Mead and Tacoma, the rolling mill at Trentwood and also an alumina refinery at Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Kaiser benefited at that early juncture from some preferential treatment, the government found it more important to establish a third competitor in the aluminum industry besides Alcoa and Reynolds than to accept the highest bid (by Reynolds).[7] Both Reynolds and Kaiser were also helped by the fact that the government had just gained royalty-free patent rights from Alcoa for an alumina production process in January 1946 (presumably as a result of United States v. Alcoa) and that leasees of government plants were allowed to benefit from the arrangement.[8]

In the early 1950s, Kaiser Aluminum grew to be a vertically integrated aluminum producer (minus their own steamship company) with own mines on Jamaica, a refinery at Baton Rouge and smelters and finishing plants in various regional markets, drawing from more war surplus plants (at Newark, Ohio and Halethorpe, Maryland) as well as starting entirely new and fairly large plants (at Chalmette, Louisiana and at Ravenswood, West Virginia). This growth was also stimulated by significant demand created by the military, both for new production, but also for the establishment of the strategic stockpile following the exhaustion caused by the recent war and the next one in Korea.

Kaiser Aluminum previously owned a subsidiary that developed real estate, including in Rancho California, California; Oregon, Washington, and Arizona.[9] In 1986, Kaiser Aluminum sold the bulk of the $450 million real estate holdings to an investor group led by Peter B. Bedford.[9]

In 1988, Charles Hurwitz and his company Maxxam, Inc. purchased KaiserTech Ltd, the Oakland-based parent of Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Company.[10] Kaiser Aluminum filed for bankruptcy in 2002, due to labor disputes, the West Coast energy crisis, and asbestos liabilities. The steel workers union was suspicious of Hurwitz on the collapse of the Kaiser Aluminum Corporation and closely watched his 1995 FDIC lawsuit because Hurwitz has a history of loss-plagued businesses.[11]

The company emerged from bankruptcy four years later.[12] In March 2006, Kaiser Aluminum determined to restate its financial statements for the quarters ended March 31, 2005; June 30, 2005; and September 30, 2005, to adjust its VEBA-related payments and derivative financial instrument transactions.

The company previously owned a stake in Anglesey Aluminium, a joint venture with Rio Tinto Group. The smelter at this facility was closed in 2009, and the entire facility was fully closed in 2013.[13]

In April 2021, Kaiser Aluminum completed acquisition of Alcoa Warrick, LLC, renaming it Kaiser Warrick, LLC. Kaiser entered into a long term ground lease with Alcoa; Alcoa retains its on site four unit coal fired generating station, smelting assets, and land assets with the remainder of the facility to be operated by Kaiser. Presently, Kaiser Aluminum Warrick operates a cast house, hot mill, cold mills, finishing mills/coating lines, and slitter lines, producing flat rolled aluminum sheet for the food and beverage container market.[5] In July 2021, Kaiser Aluminum announced plans to construct an additional roll coating line at Kaiser Aluminum Warrick, at a cost of approximately $150 Million dollars. Construction of this line is expected to begin by the first half of 2022, and achieve initial operational capability by 2024.[14]

About edit

Kaiser Aluminum is headquartered in Franklin, Tennessee. In 2020, it recorded revenues of roughly US$1.173 billion. Kaiser currently owns 13 fabricating plants that can produce more than 400,000,000 pounds (180,000 long tons) of aluminum annually.[when?] The North American plants produce approximately 500,000,000 pounds (220,000 long tons) per year of value-added sheet, can sheet, plate, extrusions, forgings, rod, bar, and tube.

With the acquisition of the former Alcoa Warrick, LLC (now Kaiser Warrick, LLC), Kaiser Aluminum now[when?] employs approximately 3,700 persons.[citation needed]

Facilities edit

Historical edit

In February 1946 Kaiser was awarded the right to lease the smelter at Mead (1946-2004[15]) (47°45′58″N 117°21′18″W / 47.76611°N 117.35500°W / 47.76611; -117.35500 (Mead smelter)).[16]

The rolling mill at Trentwood (1946–) (47°41′59″N 117°12′39″W / 47.69972°N 117.21083°W / 47.69972; -117.21083 (Trentwood rolling mill)) was leased beginning February 1946.[16] Production began to ramp up in July 1946, followed shortly by the commencement of operations in Mead.[17]

The alumina refinery at Baton Rouge (1946–) (30°27′36″N 91°11′06″W / 30.45996°N 91.18505°W / 30.45996; -91.18505 (Baton Rouge alumina plant)) began life as Plancor 226-AO. a Bayer process plant on 318 acres with a capacity of 500,000 tons of alumina per year, built at a cost of $25,683,385. The plant was closed and put on standby in July 1944. It began to produce again in December 1946, when since April[18] under 5-year lease by Kaiser, at a time when Kaiser share at the Mead smelter reached 4 potlines. B. Rouge replaced the previous utilization of stockpiled alumina at Mead, but only enough soda ash was allotted by the government to run Baton Rouge at 85% of the Mead requirements at the beginning.[19] Together with the almost finished Chalmette plant, its capacity was decided to be increased in November 1951, to 800,000 tons per year.

The war surplus smelter at Tacoma (1947–) (47°14′29″N 122°27′34″W / 47.24139°N 122.45944°W / 47.24139; -122.45944 (Tacoma smelter)) was bought outright by Kaiser for $3,000,000 in December 1946 with another $1,000,000 estimated to be needed to make it a viable operation. During the war the $6,309,240[20] and 41,500,000 pounds per year reduction plant was operated as by the Olin Industries, Inc..[21] Plancor 245 was a 100-acre facility with 233,000sqft under roof including 2 pot room buildings with a total of 240 Soderberg pots, the only one of the DPC plants making use of the process,[22] and the one with the poorest wartime performance record. Power provided by the Bonneville Power Administration.[23]

Soda ash plant at Owens Lake (1947–1950) (36°26′00″N 117°57′03″W / 36.4332°N 117.9509°W / 36.4332; -117.9509 (Owens lake soda ash plant)). In the spring of 1947 Kaiser entered into 20-year lease with the state of California to extract approximately 500,000 tons of brine per year from Owens Lake, to be converted to 100,000 tons of soda ash.[24] This plant was rapidly constructed and produced at 100 tons a day by April, filling a critical bottleneck.[25] The plant was closed in 1950, after the supply situation had been dealt with.[26]

In 1948 the war surplus rod mill later to become the rod and wire mill at Newark (1948–) (precisely at 40°00′55″N 82°27′57″W / 40.01541°N 82.46577°W / 40.01541; -82.46577 (Newark rod and wire mill)) was purchased by Kaiser Aluminum. Built as Plancor 936, a bar and rod mill of 300,000,000 pounds/year capacity costing $23,198,000, operated during wartime beginning May 1943 by Alcoa. Ingots 486m pounds/year, blooming 348m, 180m pounds of blooms usable for production of 150m pounds of rods and bars.[27][28] In January 1947 was leased by the Reynolds Metals Company.,[29] but in September 1947 again offered for purchase or lease by the government.[30] The equipment that was in 1954 still in operation from those early days of wartime production were remelt furnaces, one 38-inch 2-high blooming mill and one 22-inch 3-high finishing mill. New equipment was installed at a cost of $9,000,000 and surveyed thusly in 1954: one 10-inch finishing mill, wire drawing machines, stranding bays, continuous vulcanizing machines and plastic tuber, banbury mixer, rubber mills, triplers and quadrupler and finally electrical conductor test equipment. The wire mill trains started out with 12 feet long and 6 inches square ingots, cut down to pieces of 70-inch length and then rolled on the 10-inch mill into a 3/8-inch rod nearly 1/2 mile long in 55 seconds, in total 235,000 pounds per shift. Rods and bars were either sold, or rods were used to make wires up to 0.0056 inches thin. The wire train started with nine 8 and 10-die tandem drawing machines, followed if desired by one 13-die machine, followed if desired by one of twenty up-to-16-dies machines for the finest wire. Intermediate anneals as necessary. Wires could then be stranded around aluminum and steel cores or coated with insulation. Wire production capacity of 18,000,000 pounds / year.[31]

Construction of a 100,000 tons/year smelter at Chalmette (1951–), on the banks of the Mississippi River (precisely[32] at 29°56′15″N 89°58′52″W / 29.9376°N 89.98117°W / 29.9376; -89.98117 (Chalmette smelter)) was announced November 1950. Shortly before the plant started production at the end of 1951, doubling of the capacity was decided, primarily first for military stockpiling amidst the Korean War. As a consequence this incurred an increase by 60 percent of the Baton Rouge refinery, together with matching increase of bauxite mining in Jamaica.[33] Construction at Chalmette started February 20, 1951, production commenced on December 11 with completion of the first potline. Eight potlines were expected to produce 400,000,000 pounds per year when completed mid-1953. This would then bring Kaiser aluminum production to 790,000,000 pounds per year or 28 percent nationwide. Total spending on Chalmette was $45,000,000.[34] The plant had 16 pot-room buildings, two for each pot line, each room with 72 Soderberg-type pots of 40 pounds per hour capacity. Six of the lines were powered by 16 AC generators with rectifiers, two lines were powered by 80 1650 hp Nordberg radial gas engines each driving a DC generator. Fuel requirements amounted to 50 billion cuft of natural gas per year.[35] Potline #2 went into production on March 5, 1951.[36] A 9th potline was later added in the spring of 1958.[37]

In March 1951, as part of a $78,000,000 expansion program that included paying of the total debt to the government of $37,394,250, Kaiser leased for 5 years the aluminum and magnesium extrusion plant at Halethorpe (1951–) (39°14′23″N 76°40′49″W / 39.23972°N 76.68028°W / 39.23972; -76.68028 (Halethorp extrusion forge)). (recently 7th potline at Mead)[38] The government had been trying to privatize the $7,000,000 war surplus facility since at least the spring of 1946. During the war, the plant was operated by the Revere Copper & Brass Co.[39] The plant was with Kaiser Alu until at least 1961.[40]

On February 11, 1953, first shipment of 10,000 tons from Port Kaiser (precisely at 17°51′45″N 77°36′18″W / 17.86255°N 77.60492°W / 17.86255; -77.60492 (Port Kaiser), also called Little Pedro Point) was loaded onto the SS Evanthia (ex-George Bellows USMC hull 1947 EC2-S-C1, Greek flag, owned by P.J. Goulandris & Sons). The mine was 13 miles away from the port facilities, connected by a Kaiser-built railroad. Total capacity of the 19,000-acre mining claim on Jamaica was 2,000,000 tons of bauxite per year, estimated to last for at least 50 years. The $12,000,000 mining operation on Jamaica replaced the former source in South America. Differences in ore composition and increased capacity necessitated a $23,000,000 expansion and remodeling program at Baton Rouge, bringing the capacity there to 800,000 tons of alumina per year. Baton Rouge was the supply for all 3 (Mead, Tacoma, Chalmette) smelters. The overall expansion program to reach 800,000,000 pounds per year corporation-wide was approximately worth $200,000,000.[41]

In October 1954, Kaiser leased the forging plant at Erie (42°7′46″N 80°5′6″W / 42.12944°N 80.08500°W / 42.12944; -80.08500 (Erie forging plant)), formerly operated by Willys-Overland.[42] Plancor 1395.

In August 1954, plans for the construction of a new plant (later to become an integrated mill at Ravenswood (1955–)) on the banks of the Ohio River (38°55′58″N 81°49′34″W / 38.93264°N 81.82616°W / 38.93264; -81.82616 (Ravenswood integrated mill), precisely) were announced. Work was to begin in January 1955 on a 72 million pounds re-roll facility to be supplied by Trentwood. Immediately to follow was a program to upgrade the plant to become capable of all rolling and finishing steps and produce 250 million pounds of sheets and foil from supplies of aluminum pig out of the Chalmette plant near New Orleans. This was number 3 of Kaiser production plants in the east, after Newark (rod, bar, wire, electrical conductor) and Halethorpe (extrusions).[43] In 1958 the plant included 4 potlines with a capacity of 145,000 tons per year and a new hot rolling mill began operation. Bauxite was delivered from Jamaica via Baton Rouge (for refining). The favorable near-market location at Ravenswood, and the shortening of the production chain by cutting out the Washington state plants, came at the price of no cheap source of power. A 40-year contract for 450,000kW of coal-generated electricity was made with the Ohio Power Company. The plant ran around-the-clock in the summer of 1958, additional cold-rolling capacity was planned with the goal of reaching a capacity of 175,000 tons per year. The capital investment in Ravenswood up to that point was approximately $200,000,000.[44]

Not Aluminum edit

A flourspar mine at Gabbs (-1957), closed in 1957 due to depletion.[45]

A flourspar mill at Fallon (-1957) placed on standby in 1957.[45]

A magnesium plant at Manteca, California, probably never owned by Kaiser. Built as Plancor 707. An emergency reserve operation of inferior efficiency, the plant was shut down in June 1944 when no longer needed after being in operation for 18 to 20 months.[46] The still government-owned plant was activated in January 1951 and operated by Kaiser Aluminum.[47]

Production edit

A delivery contract for 186,000 tons of primary aluminum from Canada in the years 1953-1958 was announced on May 25, 1953. A similar contract with Alcoa called for 600,000 tons in the same period. Almost all was to be provided by Alcan, who was expecting to start production at Kitimat in the summer of 1954.[48]

U.S. Aluminum production capacity tons/year
Jan 1951[49] Dec 1952[49] Jan 1956[50]
Chalmette 100,000 200,000
Mead 145,000 175,000 175,000
Tacoma 25,000 33,200 33,200
Totals
Alcoa 368,750 568,750 706,500
Reynolds 231,500 359,500 414,500
Kaiser 170,000 308,200 408,200
Anaconda 60,000

References edit

  1. ^ "Kaiser Aluminum Revenue 2006-2021 | KALU".
  2. ^ "Kaiser Aluminum Net Income 2006-2021 | KALU".
  3. ^ "Kaiser Aluminum Total Assets 2006-2021 | KALU".
  4. ^ "Kaiser Aluminum Number of Employees 2006-2021 | KALU".
  5. ^ a b . Archived from the original on May 4, 2021. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  6. ^ Kaiser Industries Corporation, Oakland, California (1968). "The Postwar Gamble". (PDF). p. 39. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 16, 2015. Retrieved March 24, 2016.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ "Kaiser Gets Five Year Lease on Two Spokane Aluminum Facilities". The Iron Age. Vol. 157, no. 9. February 28, 1946. p. 104.
  8. ^ "Alcoa Grants RFC Royalty Free Patent Rights in Bauxite Extraction". The Iron Age. Vol. 157, no. 3. January 17, 1946. p. 104.
  9. ^ a b Brooks, Nancy Rivera (July 12, 1986). "Kaiser Aluminum to Sell Bulk of Real Estate Assets". Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved April 12, 2017.
  10. ^ Delugach, Al (May 30, 1988). "Charles Hurwitz--Publicity-Shy Empire Builder : Kaiser Aluminum's Bidder Is a Private Person but Controversy Follows Him". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 17, 2021.
  11. ^ Stucke, John (August 25, 2005). "Judge Orders FDIC To Pay Hurwitz". Newspapers.com. The Spokesman-Review. p. 8. Retrieved April 17, 2021.
  12. ^ Nicholas K. Geranios (July 6, 2006). "Kaiser Aluminum emerges from bankruptcy proceedings". The Seattle Times. Associated Press. Retrieved March 21, 2014.
  13. ^ "Anglesey Aluminium: 60 jobs to go as metals site closes". BBC News. February 22, 2013.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on October 23, 2021. Retrieved October 22, 2021.
  15. ^ "Cleanup of Kaiser Mead plant lends clues into CFAC future". March 18, 2023.
  16. ^ a b "Kaiser Gets Five Year Leases on Two Spokane Aluminum Facilities". The Iron Age. Vol. 157, no. 9. February 28, 1946. p. 104.
  17. ^ "West Coast..." The Iron Age. Vol. 158, no. 2. July 11, 1946. p. 78.
  18. ^ "WAA Announces Lease of Plants to Kaiser, Reynolds and Others". The Iron Age. Vol. 157, no. 18. May 2, 1946. p. 156.
  19. ^ "West Coast..." The Iron Age. Vol. 158, no. 25. December 19, 1946. p. 96.
  20. ^ Congress Surplus Property Board (September 21, 1945). Aluminum Plants and Facilities. p. 59.
  21. ^ "Kaiser Buys Tacoma Aluminum Ingot Plant". The Iron Age. Vol. 158, no. 23. December 5, 1946. p. 132.
  22. ^ Congress Surplus Property Board (September 21, 1945). Aluminum Plants and Facilities. p. 56.
  23. ^ Office of Property Disposal (September 1946). The Plant Finder. Listing of Government-Owned Industrial Plants. War Assets Administration.
  24. ^ "West Coast..." The Iron Age. Vol. 159, no. 4. January 23, 1947. p. 84.
  25. ^ "West Coast..." The Iron Age. Vol. 159, no. 16. April 17, 1947. p. 84.
  26. ^ Owens Lake Soda Ash Company Environmental Impact Statement. 1994.
  27. ^ Congress Surplus Property Board (September 21, 1945). Aluminum Plants and Facilities. p. 61.
  28. ^ Congress Surplus Property Board (September 21, 1945). Aluminum Plants and Facilities. p. 12.
  29. ^ "Briefs..." Steel. Vol. 120, no. 2. January 13, 1947. p. 69.
  30. ^ "Briefs..." Steel. Vol. 121, no. 11. September 15, 1947. p. 79.
  31. ^ "Aluminum Wire By the Mile". Steel. Vol. 134, no. 26. June 28, 1954. p. 103.
  32. ^ "Kaiser Aluminum Plant in Chalmette Louisiana in the 1960s (hp003681)". Louisiana Digital Library.
  33. ^ "Kaiser plans to double capacity..." Steel. Vol. 129, no. 21. November 19, 1951. p. 175.
  34. ^ "Kaiser Opens at New Orleans". Steel. Vol. 129, no. 24. December 10, 1951. p. 62.
  35. ^ "Kaiser Pours First Aluminum in New Chalmette Plant". Steel. Vol. 129, no. 25. December 17, 1951. p. 62.
  36. ^ "Chalmette One-fourth Complete". Steel. Vol. 130, no. 11. March 17, 1952. p. 69.
  37. ^ "Kaiser Enlarges Plant". Steel. Vol. 142, no. 11. March 17, 1958. p. 71.
  38. ^ "Aluminum Extrusion Plant to be Reactivated by Kaiser". The Iron Age. Vol. 167, no. 9. March 1, 1951. p. 127.
  39. ^ "WAA Plans Disposition of Surplus War Plants Valued at Billion". The Iron Age. Vol. 157, no. 15. April 11, 1946. p. 140.
  40. ^ "Men in Metalworking". The Iron Age. Vol. 188, no. 22. November 30, 1961. p. 134.
  41. ^ "Kaiser Opens Jamaica Bauxite Facilities". Steel. Vol. 132, no. 8. February 23, 1953. p. 50.
  42. ^ "Kaiser Broadens Range". Steel. Vol. 135, no. 16. October 18, 1954. p. 140.
  43. ^ "Kaiser Aluminum to Move East with New Sheet Mill". Steel. Vol. 135, no. 9. August 30, 1954. p. 33.
  44. ^ "Kaiser Begins Hot Rolling". Steel. Vol. 142, no. 23. June 9, 1958. p. 58.
  45. ^ a b "Flourspar Consumption Record in 1957; Stocks Jump". E & MJ Metal and Mineral Markets. Vol. 29, no. 23. June 5, 1958. p. 4.
  46. ^ "West Coast..." The Iron Age. Vol. 153, no. 25. June 15, 1944. p. 100.
  47. ^ "Magnesium Plant To Resume". E & MJ Metal and Mineral Markets. Vol. 22, no. 4. January 25, 1951. p. 3.
  48. ^ "Aluminum Producers Buy 786,000 tons in Canada". E & MJ Metal and Mineral Markets. Vol. 24, no. 22. May 28, 1953. p. 3.
  49. ^ a b "Aluminum: Ring Bell on First Round". The Iron Age. Vol. 170, no. 23. December 4, 1952. p. 97.
  50. ^ "III: Structure of the United States Aluminum Industry". Materials Survey Aluminum, Compiled for the Office of Defense Mobilization. Department of Commerce, Business and Defense Service Administration. November 1956. p. 2.

External links edit

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Kaiser Aluminum Corporation is an American aluminum producer It is a spinoff from Kaiser Aluminum and Chemicals Corporation which came to be when common stock was offered in Permanente Metals Corporation and Permanente Metals Corporation s name was changed to Kaiser Aluminum and Chemicals Corporation 6 Kaiser AluminumFormerlyKaiser Aluminum and Chemical CompanyCompany typePublicTraded asNasdaq KALUS amp P 600 ComponentIndustryAluminumFounded1946 in Washington state U S HeadquartersFranklin Tennessee U S Key peopleKeith A Harvey President and Chief Executive OfficerProductsRolled aluminum plate sheet can sheet and extruded products RevenueUS 1 173 billion 2020 1 Net incomeUS 29 million 2020 2 Total assets 1 865 billion 2020 3 Number of employees3 700 2021 4 5 SubsidiariesAnglesey Aluminium Imperial Machine amp Tool Kaiser Warrick LLCWebsiteOfficial website Contents 1 History 2 About 3 Facilities 3 1 Historical 3 2 Not Aluminum 4 Production 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp A former Kaiser Aluminum plant 1972 next to the Huey Long Bridge in Baton Rouge Louisiana Founded in 1946 Henry J Kaiser s corporation entered the aluminum business by leasing then purchasing three government owned aluminum facilities in Washington state These were the primary reduction plants at Mead and Tacoma the rolling mill at Trentwood and also an alumina refinery at Baton Rouge Louisiana Kaiser benefited at that early juncture from some preferential treatment the government found it more important to establish a third competitor in the aluminum industry besides Alcoa and Reynolds than to accept the highest bid by Reynolds 7 Both Reynolds and Kaiser were also helped by the fact that the government had just gained royalty free patent rights from Alcoa for an alumina production process in January 1946 presumably as a result of United States v Alcoa and that leasees of government plants were allowed to benefit from the arrangement 8 In the early 1950s Kaiser Aluminum grew to be a vertically integrated aluminum producer minus their own steamship company with own mines on Jamaica a refinery at Baton Rouge and smelters and finishing plants in various regional markets drawing from more war surplus plants at Newark Ohio and Halethorpe Maryland as well as starting entirely new and fairly large plants at Chalmette Louisiana and at Ravenswood West Virginia This growth was also stimulated by significant demand created by the military both for new production but also for the establishment of the strategic stockpile following the exhaustion caused by the recent war and the next one in Korea Kaiser Aluminum previously owned a subsidiary that developed real estate including in Rancho California California Oregon Washington and Arizona 9 In 1986 Kaiser Aluminum sold the bulk of the 450 million real estate holdings to an investor group led by Peter B Bedford 9 In 1988 Charles Hurwitz and his company Maxxam Inc purchased KaiserTech Ltd the Oakland based parent of Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Company 10 Kaiser Aluminum filed for bankruptcy in 2002 due to labor disputes the West Coast energy crisis and asbestos liabilities The steel workers union was suspicious of Hurwitz on the collapse of the Kaiser Aluminum Corporation and closely watched his 1995 FDIC lawsuit because Hurwitz has a history of loss plagued businesses 11 The company emerged from bankruptcy four years later 12 In March 2006 Kaiser Aluminum determined to restate its financial statements for the quarters ended March 31 2005 June 30 2005 and September 30 2005 to adjust its VEBA related payments and derivative financial instrument transactions The company previously owned a stake in Anglesey Aluminium a joint venture with Rio Tinto Group The smelter at this facility was closed in 2009 and the entire facility was fully closed in 2013 13 In April 2021 Kaiser Aluminum completed acquisition of Alcoa Warrick LLC renaming it Kaiser Warrick LLC Kaiser entered into a long term ground lease with Alcoa Alcoa retains its on site four unit coal fired generating station smelting assets and land assets with the remainder of the facility to be operated by Kaiser Presently Kaiser Aluminum Warrick operates a cast house hot mill cold mills finishing mills coating lines and slitter lines producing flat rolled aluminum sheet for the food and beverage container market 5 In July 2021 Kaiser Aluminum announced plans to construct an additional roll coating line at Kaiser Aluminum Warrick at a cost of approximately 150 Million dollars Construction of this line is expected to begin by the first half of 2022 and achieve initial operational capability by 2024 14 About editKaiser Aluminum is headquartered in Franklin Tennessee In 2020 it recorded revenues of roughly US 1 173 billion Kaiser currently owns 13 fabricating plants that can produce more than 400 000 000 pounds 180 000 long tons of aluminum annually when The North American plants produce approximately 500 000 000 pounds 220 000 long tons per year of value added sheet can sheet plate extrusions forgings rod bar and tube With the acquisition of the former Alcoa Warrick LLC now Kaiser Warrick LLC Kaiser Aluminum now when employs approximately 3 700 persons citation needed Facilities editHistorical edit In February 1946 Kaiser was awarded the right to lease the smelter at Mead 1946 2004 15 47 45 58 N 117 21 18 W 47 76611 N 117 35500 W 47 76611 117 35500 Mead smelter 16 The rolling mill at Trentwood 1946 47 41 59 N 117 12 39 W 47 69972 N 117 21083 W 47 69972 117 21083 Trentwood rolling mill was leased beginning February 1946 16 Production began to ramp up in July 1946 followed shortly by the commencement of operations in Mead 17 The alumina refinery at Baton Rouge 1946 30 27 36 N 91 11 06 W 30 45996 N 91 18505 W 30 45996 91 18505 Baton Rouge alumina plant began life as Plancor 226 AO a Bayer process plant on 318 acres with a capacity of 500 000 tons of alumina per year built at a cost of 25 683 385 The plant was closed and put on standby in July 1944 It began to produce again in December 1946 when since April 18 under 5 year lease by Kaiser at a time when Kaiser share at the Mead smelter reached 4 potlines B Rouge replaced the previous utilization of stockpiled alumina at Mead but only enough soda ash was allotted by the government to run Baton Rouge at 85 of the Mead requirements at the beginning 19 Together with the almost finished Chalmette plant its capacity was decided to be increased in November 1951 to 800 000 tons per year The war surplus smelter at Tacoma 1947 47 14 29 N 122 27 34 W 47 24139 N 122 45944 W 47 24139 122 45944 Tacoma smelter was bought outright by Kaiser for 3 000 000 in December 1946 with another 1 000 000 estimated to be needed to make it a viable operation During the war the 6 309 240 20 and 41 500 000 pounds per year reduction plant was operated as by the Olin Industries Inc 21 Plancor 245 was a 100 acre facility with 233 000sqft under roof including 2 pot room buildings with a total of 240 Soderberg pots the only one of the DPC plants making use of the process 22 and the one with the poorest wartime performance record Power provided by the Bonneville Power Administration 23 Soda ash plant at Owens Lake 1947 1950 36 26 00 N 117 57 03 W 36 4332 N 117 9509 W 36 4332 117 9509 Owens lake soda ash plant In the spring of 1947 Kaiser entered into 20 year lease with the state of California to extract approximately 500 000 tons of brine per year from Owens Lake to be converted to 100 000 tons of soda ash 24 This plant was rapidly constructed and produced at 100 tons a day by April filling a critical bottleneck 25 The plant was closed in 1950 after the supply situation had been dealt with 26 In 1948 the war surplus rod mill later to become the rod and wire mill at Newark 1948 precisely at 40 00 55 N 82 27 57 W 40 01541 N 82 46577 W 40 01541 82 46577 Newark rod and wire mill was purchased by Kaiser Aluminum Built as Plancor 936 a bar and rod mill of 300 000 000 pounds year capacity costing 23 198 000 operated during wartime beginning May 1943 by Alcoa Ingots 486m pounds year blooming 348m 180m pounds of blooms usable for production of 150m pounds of rods and bars 27 28 In January 1947 was leased by the Reynolds Metals Company 29 but in September 1947 again offered for purchase or lease by the government 30 The equipment that was in 1954 still in operation from those early days of wartime production were remelt furnaces one 38 inch 2 high blooming mill and one 22 inch 3 high finishing mill New equipment was installed at a cost of 9 000 000 and surveyed thusly in 1954 one 10 inch finishing mill wire drawing machines stranding bays continuous vulcanizing machines and plastic tuber banbury mixer rubber mills triplers and quadrupler and finally electrical conductor test equipment The wire mill trains started out with 12 feet long and 6 inches square ingots cut down to pieces of 70 inch length and then rolled on the 10 inch mill into a 3 8 inch rod nearly 1 2 mile long in 55 seconds in total 235 000 pounds per shift Rods and bars were either sold or rods were used to make wires up to 0 0056 inches thin The wire train started with nine 8 and 10 die tandem drawing machines followed if desired by one 13 die machine followed if desired by one of twenty up to 16 dies machines for the finest wire Intermediate anneals as necessary Wires could then be stranded around aluminum and steel cores or coated with insulation Wire production capacity of 18 000 000 pounds year 31 Construction of a 100 000 tons year smelter at Chalmette 1951 on the banks of the Mississippi River precisely 32 at 29 56 15 N 89 58 52 W 29 9376 N 89 98117 W 29 9376 89 98117 Chalmette smelter was announced November 1950 Shortly before the plant started production at the end of 1951 doubling of the capacity was decided primarily first for military stockpiling amidst the Korean War As a consequence this incurred an increase by 60 percent of the Baton Rouge refinery together with matching increase of bauxite mining in Jamaica 33 Construction at Chalmette started February 20 1951 production commenced on December 11 with completion of the first potline Eight potlines were expected to produce 400 000 000 pounds per year when completed mid 1953 This would then bring Kaiser aluminum production to 790 000 000 pounds per year or 28 percent nationwide Total spending on Chalmette was 45 000 000 34 The plant had 16 pot room buildings two for each pot line each room with 72 Soderberg type pots of 40 pounds per hour capacity Six of the lines were powered by 16 AC generators with rectifiers two lines were powered by 80 1650 hp Nordberg radial gas engines each driving a DC generator Fuel requirements amounted to 50 billion cuft of natural gas per year 35 Potline 2 went into production on March 5 1951 36 A 9th potline was later added in the spring of 1958 37 In March 1951 as part of a 78 000 000 expansion program that included paying of the total debt to the government of 37 394 250 Kaiser leased for 5 years the aluminum and magnesium extrusion plant at Halethorpe 1951 39 14 23 N 76 40 49 W 39 23972 N 76 68028 W 39 23972 76 68028 Halethorp extrusion forge recently 7th potline at Mead 38 The government had been trying to privatize the 7 000 000 war surplus facility since at least the spring of 1946 During the war the plant was operated by the Revere Copper amp Brass Co 39 The plant was with Kaiser Alu until at least 1961 40 On February 11 1953 first shipment of 10 000 tons from Port Kaiser precisely at 17 51 45 N 77 36 18 W 17 86255 N 77 60492 W 17 86255 77 60492 Port Kaiser also called Little Pedro Point was loaded onto the SS Evanthia ex George Bellows USMC hull 1947 EC2 S C1 Greek flag owned by P J Goulandris amp Sons The mine was 13 miles away from the port facilities connected by a Kaiser built railroad Total capacity of the 19 000 acre mining claim on Jamaica was 2 000 000 tons of bauxite per year estimated to last for at least 50 years The 12 000 000 mining operation on Jamaica replaced the former source in South America Differences in ore composition and increased capacity necessitated a 23 000 000 expansion and remodeling program at Baton Rouge bringing the capacity there to 800 000 tons of alumina per year Baton Rouge was the supply for all 3 Mead Tacoma Chalmette smelters The overall expansion program to reach 800 000 000 pounds per year corporation wide was approximately worth 200 000 000 41 In October 1954 Kaiser leased the forging plant at Erie 42 7 46 N 80 5 6 W 42 12944 N 80 08500 W 42 12944 80 08500 Erie forging plant formerly operated by Willys Overland 42 Plancor 1395 In August 1954 plans for the construction of a new plant later to become an integrated mill at Ravenswood 1955 on the banks of the Ohio River 38 55 58 N 81 49 34 W 38 93264 N 81 82616 W 38 93264 81 82616 Ravenswood integrated mill precisely were announced Work was to begin in January 1955 on a 72 million pounds re roll facility to be supplied by Trentwood Immediately to follow was a program to upgrade the plant to become capable of all rolling and finishing steps and produce 250 million pounds of sheets and foil from supplies of aluminum pig out of the Chalmette plant near New Orleans This was number 3 of Kaiser production plants in the east after Newark rod bar wire electrical conductor and Halethorpe extrusions 43 In 1958 the plant included 4 potlines with a capacity of 145 000 tons per year and a new hot rolling mill began operation Bauxite was delivered from Jamaica via Baton Rouge for refining The favorable near market location at Ravenswood and the shortening of the production chain by cutting out the Washington state plants came at the price of no cheap source of power A 40 year contract for 450 000kW of coal generated electricity was made with the Ohio Power Company The plant ran around the clock in the summer of 1958 additional cold rolling capacity was planned with the goal of reaching a capacity of 175 000 tons per year The capital investment in Ravenswood up to that point was approximately 200 000 000 44 Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Not Aluminum edit A flourspar mine at Gabbs 1957 closed in 1957 due to depletion 45 A flourspar mill at Fallon 1957 placed on standby in 1957 45 A magnesium plant at Manteca California probably never owned by Kaiser Built as Plancor 707 An emergency reserve operation of inferior efficiency the plant was shut down in June 1944 when no longer needed after being in operation for 18 to 20 months 46 The still government owned plant was activated in January 1951 and operated by Kaiser Aluminum 47 Production editA delivery contract for 186 000 tons of primary aluminum from Canada in the years 1953 1958 was announced on May 25 1953 A similar contract with Alcoa called for 600 000 tons in the same period Almost all was to be provided by Alcan who was expecting to start production at Kitimat in the summer of 1954 48 U S Aluminum production capacity tons year Jan 1951 49 Dec 1952 49 Jan 1956 50 Chalmette 100 000 200 000 Mead 145 000 175 000 175 000 Tacoma 25 000 33 200 33 200 Totals Alcoa 368 750 568 750 706 500 Reynolds 231 500 359 500 414 500 Kaiser 170 000 308 200 408 200 Anaconda 60 000References edit Kaiser Aluminum Revenue 2006 2021 KALU Kaiser Aluminum Net Income 2006 2021 KALU Kaiser Aluminum Total Assets 2006 2021 KALU Kaiser Aluminum Number of Employees 2006 2021 KALU a b Kaiser Aluminum Corporation Completes the Purchase of Alcoa Warrick LLC and Re enters the North American Aluminum Packaging Industry Kaiser Aluminum Archived from the original on May 4 2021 Retrieved May 4 2021 Kaiser Industries Corporation Oakland California 1968 The Postwar Gamble The Kaiser Story PDF p 39 Archived from the original PDF on June 16 2015 Retrieved March 24 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Kaiser Gets Five Year Lease on Two Spokane Aluminum Facilities The Iron Age Vol 157 no 9 February 28 1946 p 104 Alcoa Grants RFC Royalty Free Patent Rights in Bauxite Extraction The Iron Age Vol 157 no 3 January 17 1946 p 104 a b Brooks Nancy Rivera July 12 1986 Kaiser Aluminum to Sell Bulk of Real Estate Assets Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved April 12 2017 Delugach Al May 30 1988 Charles Hurwitz Publicity Shy Empire Builder Kaiser Aluminum s Bidder Is a Private Person but Controversy Follows Him Los Angeles Times Retrieved April 17 2021 Stucke John August 25 2005 Judge Orders FDIC To Pay Hurwitz Newspapers com The Spokesman Review p 8 Retrieved April 17 2021 Nicholas K Geranios July 6 2006 Kaiser Aluminum emerges from bankruptcy proceedings The Seattle Times Associated Press Retrieved March 21 2014 Anglesey Aluminium 60 jobs to go as metals site closes BBC News February 22 2013 Kaiser Aluminum Corporation Reports Second Quarter and First Half 2021 Financial Results Kaiser Aluminum Archived from the original on October 23 2021 Retrieved October 22 2021 Cleanup of Kaiser Mead plant lends clues into CFAC future March 18 2023 a b Kaiser Gets Five Year Leases on Two Spokane Aluminum Facilities The Iron Age Vol 157 no 9 February 28 1946 p 104 West Coast The Iron Age Vol 158 no 2 July 11 1946 p 78 WAA Announces Lease of Plants to Kaiser Reynolds and Others The Iron Age Vol 157 no 18 May 2 1946 p 156 West Coast The Iron Age Vol 158 no 25 December 19 1946 p 96 Congress Surplus Property Board September 21 1945 Aluminum Plants and Facilities p 59 Kaiser Buys Tacoma Aluminum Ingot Plant The Iron Age Vol 158 no 23 December 5 1946 p 132 Congress Surplus Property Board September 21 1945 Aluminum Plants and Facilities p 56 Office of Property Disposal September 1946 The Plant Finder Listing of Government Owned Industrial Plants War Assets Administration West Coast The Iron Age Vol 159 no 4 January 23 1947 p 84 West Coast The Iron Age Vol 159 no 16 April 17 1947 p 84 Owens Lake Soda Ash Company Environmental Impact Statement 1994 Congress Surplus Property Board September 21 1945 Aluminum Plants and Facilities p 61 Congress Surplus Property Board September 21 1945 Aluminum Plants and Facilities p 12 Briefs Steel Vol 120 no 2 January 13 1947 p 69 Briefs Steel Vol 121 no 11 September 15 1947 p 79 Aluminum Wire By the Mile Steel Vol 134 no 26 June 28 1954 p 103 Kaiser Aluminum Plant in Chalmette Louisiana in the 1960s hp003681 Louisiana Digital Library Kaiser plans to double capacity Steel Vol 129 no 21 November 19 1951 p 175 Kaiser Opens at New Orleans Steel Vol 129 no 24 December 10 1951 p 62 Kaiser Pours First Aluminum in New Chalmette Plant Steel Vol 129 no 25 December 17 1951 p 62 Chalmette One fourth Complete Steel Vol 130 no 11 March 17 1952 p 69 Kaiser Enlarges Plant Steel Vol 142 no 11 March 17 1958 p 71 Aluminum Extrusion Plant to be Reactivated by Kaiser The Iron Age Vol 167 no 9 March 1 1951 p 127 WAA Plans Disposition of Surplus War Plants Valued at Billion The Iron Age Vol 157 no 15 April 11 1946 p 140 Men in Metalworking The Iron Age Vol 188 no 22 November 30 1961 p 134 Kaiser Opens Jamaica Bauxite Facilities Steel Vol 132 no 8 February 23 1953 p 50 Kaiser Broadens Range Steel Vol 135 no 16 October 18 1954 p 140 Kaiser Aluminum to Move East with New Sheet Mill Steel Vol 135 no 9 August 30 1954 p 33 Kaiser Begins Hot Rolling Steel Vol 142 no 23 June 9 1958 p 58 a b Flourspar Consumption Record in 1957 Stocks Jump E amp MJ Metal and Mineral Markets Vol 29 no 23 June 5 1958 p 4 West Coast The Iron Age Vol 153 no 25 June 15 1944 p 100 Magnesium Plant To Resume E amp MJ Metal and Mineral Markets Vol 22 no 4 January 25 1951 p 3 Aluminum Producers Buy 786 000 tons in Canada E amp MJ Metal and Mineral Markets Vol 24 no 22 May 28 1953 p 3 a b Aluminum Ring Bell on First Round The Iron Age Vol 170 no 23 December 4 1952 p 97 III Structure of the United States Aluminum Industry Materials Survey Aluminum Compiled for the Office of Defense Mobilization Department of Commerce Business and Defense Service Administration November 1956 p 2 External links editOfficial website nbsp Business data for Kaiser Auminum Corporation BloombergGoogleReutersSEC filingsYahoo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kaiser Aluminum amp oldid 1221829321, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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