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ZA - Global crisis hits Mozambique Mozal aluminium project

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Mozambique's $2.5 billion Mozal aluminium smelter reported a loss of $115 million for the 2008 financial year and will have to cut staff due to the economic slowdown, a central bank document showed on Wednesday. A fall in the price of aluminium hit the company's profits, and Mozal's power supply was cut by 10 percent after an energy crisis hit neighbouring South Africa. Mozal derives its electricity from Mozambican distribution company Motraco, set up by utilities from Mozambique, South Africa and Swaziland. Prime Minister Luisa Diogo told Radio Mozambique on Wednesday that Mozal, Mozambique's largest company, plans to make 90 workers redundant this year. "Mozambique will also feel the pinch of this (global) financial crisis as Mozal will have to cut down its labour force," she said. The price of aluminium fell to its lowest level since October 2002 on Wednesday, as concerns over dwindling demand were reinforced by further bad news for the car industry and a rise in inventories to record levels. Aluminium for delivery in three months on the London Metal Exchange MAL3 dropped to a low of $1,314 a tonne, a price last seen more than six years ago. It edged up to close at $1,336, against $1,330 on Tuesday. Mozal, one of the biggest aluminium foundries in Africa, is a partnership between BHP Billiton (BLT.L: Quote, Profile, Research), Japan's Mitsubishi Co, South Africa's Industrial Development Corporation and the Mozambican government.

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