Abstract: | The Soviet Union possesses a huge hydro-electric power potential in southern Siberia, providing attractive sites for aluminium reduction capacity, but is poorly supplied with high-grade domestic bauxite resources. An early enthusiasm for the use of non-bauxitic domestic materials, notably nepheline and alunite, has waned in recent years, and Soviet aluminium planners have shown an increasing preference for imports of bauxite and alumina. By 1975 as much as 40% of Soviet aluminium production was derived from imported raw materials, indicating an unusual willingness to become dependent on foreign ore sources for this strategic metal. Future intentions are demonstrated by the abandonment of earlier plans for an expansion of non-bauxite based production, the construction of a large alumina plant on the Black Sea coast and proposals for a second seaboard plant on the Pacific coast, both using imported bauxite. |