By Luc Cohen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Ford Motor Co
Novelis said it expects to begin shipping product from its Oswego, New York, plant for the F-Series Super Duty lorry line in spring 2016. Ford's first aluminum-body lorry, the 2015 F-150, was launched in December 2014.
The trucks will go on sale late next year, a Ford spokesman said, adding that Alcoa Inc
Automakers have been looking for lighter aluminium alloys to replace high-strength steel, which is far heavier. Lighter aluminium alloys would enable them to build vehicles that burn less fuel but meet safety standards.
Also Read
Growing aluminium demand from car manufacturers is one of the few bright spots in a severely oversupplied market. The Super Duty series is the first major vehicle to announce it is becoming aluminum-intensive since the F-150 announcement last year.
The move may restore positive sentiment on automotive demand for aluminium after an absence of new plans for aluminum-intensive vehicles following the F-150's shift.
Novelis plans to use "what we learnt from the massive success of the game-changing 2015 Ford F-150" in working on the F-Series, Novelis North America President Marco Palmieri said in a statement.
The move comes a month after Novelis raised concerns about U.S. automotive aluminium demand, with Chief Executive Steve Fisher saying the industry was going through a "digestion period" following Ford's F-150 announcement.
He said plants were shifting capacity to automotive purposes, and away from other applications, at a slower rate than anticipated.
Novelis, owned by Indian conglomerate Aditya Birla Group, is in the process of constructing its third automotive sheet finishing line at Oswego to supply the F-Series, which will be the second-highest volume aluminium automobile after the F-150.
The use of aluminium in the F-Series will reduce the trucks' weight by 350 pounds (159 kg), compared with a 700 pound (318 kg)-reduction for the F-150.
The news comes as exports from top-producer China have pressured London Metal Exchange (LME) prices
The U.S. Midwest premium paid on top of LME prices for physical delivery
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)


