On February 11, 2026, Novelis, the world’s largest aluminium rolling and recycling company, issued an update on restoration progress at its hot mill in Oswego, New York. The facility has been offline since September 2025 following two devastating fires, and is now expected to restart late in the second quarter of 2026. The prolonged disruption has exposed critical vulnerabilities in the automotive aluminium supply chain and triggered billions of dollars in losses.
A Double Blow: Two Fires in Three Months
The first fire broke out on September 16, 2025, causing major structural damage to the Oswego hot mill — one of North America’s most important automotive-grade aluminium sheet production facilities. The fire immediately disrupted aluminium supply to multiple automakers.
In a cruel twist of fate, just two weeks after Novelis announced “substantial progress” in rebuilding and expressed confidence in a late-2025 restart, a second significant fire struck on November 20, completely derailing the accelerated reopening schedule. The hot mill has remained offline ever since.
Root Cause Analysis: Multiple Contributing Factors
Novelis is still conducting a thorough analysis of the September fire. Preliminary findings suggest several factors may have contributed, including the composition and characteristics of the aluminium coil, lubricants used in the mill, and the surrounding structural elements. The cause of the November fire remains under investigation.
These findings hint at previously underappreciated safety risks inherent in the hot rolling process, raising important questions about safety management across the aluminium processing industry.
Ford Bears the Brunt: A $2 Billion Headwind
As one of Novelis’s largest automotive customers, Ford Motor Company has been hit hardest. During a February 10 earnings call, Ford President and CEO Jim Farley disclosed a “$2 billion headwind from Novelis fires,” compounded by an additional $2 billion net tariff impact.
Ford’s production strategy has undergone dramatic shifts in response:
- Plans to increase F-150 and F-Series Super Duty production by more than 50,000 units in 2026 to recover fire-related losses
- Decision to end production of the aluminium-intensive F-150 Lightning EV, replacing it with an extended-range electric model
- Redeployment of Lightning production workers to the Dearborn Truck Plant to support a third crew for F-150 ICE and hybrid production
Global Network Mobilised for Emergency Response
“We are aggressively leveraging our global footprint and third-party sources to serve our customers while we simultaneously restore the Oswego plant to full operation,” said Steve Fisher, President and CEO of Novelis. “Based on work to-date, we expect to restart the Oswego hot mill late in the second quarter of calendar 2026.”
A joint statement from Novelis and Ford confirmed that finished material continues to ship from the facility, with Novelis leveraging “alternate sources, including its global network of plants and industry peers” to mitigate impact — a strategy still actively in place as of February 2026.
Deeper Lessons for Supply Chain Resilience
The Novelis fire saga offers several critical lessons for the global automotive supply chain:
- Concentration risk in critical materials — a single facility shutdown can trigger multi-billion-dollar losses across the value chain
- Recovery uncertainty far exceeds initial estimates — the second fire proved that worst-case scenarios can compound
- Material substitution strategies are essential — Ford’s pivot from the aluminium-heavy Lightning to hybrid powertrains reflects both short-term necessity and long-term strategic repositioning
- Resilience investment is insurance, not cost — automakers that had diversified their aluminium sourcing were better positioned to weather the disruption
Outlook: Restart Timeline Remains Uncertain
While Novelis expresses confidence in a late Q2 restart, the market remains cautious given the precedent of the second fire. A post-restart ramp-up period means that tight automotive aluminium supply in North America could persist well into the second half of 2026.
For the broader automotive industry, this year-long supply chain crisis reinforces a fundamental truth: in globalised supply networks, any single point of failure can trigger cascading effects far beyond initial projections. Building truly resilient supply chains requires not just backup supplier lists, but systematic risk assessment and proactive strategic adaptation.
Source: automotivelogistics.media









