OREANDA-NEWS. UC RUSAL, the world’s largest producer of aluminium and its alloys, and HydroOGK, Russia’s leader in the area of renewable energy, have begun construction of the Boguchanskiy Aluminium Smelter.

According to the press service of UC RUSAL, the 600,000 tpa-strong smelter will be one of Russia’s five largest. Total investment in this project is expected to reach USD 2.3 billion.

The foundation stone for the smelter was laid today in the village of Tayozhny, Krasnoyarsk, in the presence of Alexander Khloponin, Governor of Krasnoyarsk, Anatoly Chubais, RAO UES Board Chairman, Oleg Deripaska, UC RUSAL Board member, Alexander Bulygin, UC RUSAL CEO, and Vyacheslav Sinyugin, HydroOGK Board Chairman.

The Boguchanskiy Aluminium Smelter is being built as part of the Boguchanskoye Energy and Metal Complex project – a joint effort by UC RUSAL and HyrdoOGK. The project’s feasibility study was prepared by the All-Russia Aluminium and Magnesium Institute (VAMI), a subsidiary of UC RUSAL, and Bechtel, the international engineering company.

The smelter will include a reduction area, a baked anode production plant, a casthouse and related auxiliary facilities. The smelter will be outfitted with RA-300 reduction cells, a UC RUSAL proprietary technology and one of the world’s most efficient and clean electrolysis technologies. Commissioning of the smelter is expected to take place in December 2009, with full capacity to be attained in the second quarter of 2011.

Investment into the project in 2007 will roughly amount to USD 195 mln and will include completion of 60% of earth works, as well as preparation of foundations for the reduction area and casthouse and installation of housing for the anticipated work crew.

In addition to witnessing the laying of the smelter’s foundation stone, the delegation also visited the Boguchanskaya HPP construction site. Since work was restarted in December 2005 to complete the plant, the dam has been reinforced with 110,000 cubic metres of hydraulic and bituminous concrete, 2 mln cubic metres of earth works have been finished, and over 2,000 tonnes of supporting metal infrastructure has been installed. Basic equipment for the power plant has also been ordered from an array of leading Russian and global suppliers. In 2006, investment into the construction works amounted to approximately USD 192 mln, and this sum is expected to rise to USD 385 mln in 2007.