Maaden Aluminium Company
Mohammed Aftab Alam, CMRP, MLT2, is a seasoned professional with extensive experience in reliability engineering and operations management. Currently serving as Lead Engineer of Reliability at Maaden Aluminium Company since January 2014, Mohammed Aftab Alam oversees lubrication management and the reliability of rotating machines at the Alumina Refinery Plant. Prior experience includes roles as Manager of Operations at Vedanta Aluminium Ltd., where responsibilities encompassed the maintenance of critical utility systems, and as Associate Manager at Bharat Aluminium Company, focusing on potroom operations in a smelter plant. Mohammed Aftab Alam holds a Bachelor of Technology (B.Tech.) degree in Mechanical Engineering from Aligarh Muslim University, obtained between 1999 and 2005.
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Maaden Aluminium Company
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Ma'aden's $10.8 billion joint venture with Alcoa will be the largest and most efficient vertically integrated aluminium complex in the world. It will use Saudi Arabia's bauxite resources to profitably produce aluminium for domestic and international markets as well as to facilitate the development of domestic downstream industries in the Kingdom. The aluminium project involves the development, design, construction and subsequent operation of two integrated sites: Al Ba'itha Al Ba'itha, near Quiba in north-eastern Saudi Arabia and around 600km north west of Ras Al Khair, is the site of the project's bauxite mine and ore crushing and handling facilities which are due to begin production in 2014.The mine plan has been prepared based upon the estimated capacities of the project's refinery and smelter and envisages production at an annual mining rate of 4.0 million mtpy of bauxite. Ras Al Khair The project's alumina refinery, aluminium smelter and rolling mill are under construction at Ras Al Khair, 90 km North of Jubail. Bauxite ore transported by rail to Ras Al Khair will be refined in the GCC's first alumina refinery to produce 1.8 million mtpy of alumina, which will in turn be processed in the smelter to produce 740,000 mtpy of aluminium. The rolling mill with initial hot-mill capacity of 380,000 mtpy will focus initially on the production of sheet, end and tab stock for the manufacture of cans and other products including auto, construction and foil applications. The rolling mill will be one of the world's most technically advanced and will have the capacity to re-cycle aluminium scrap. The smelter and rolling mill will begin operations in 2013 while the alumina refinery will come on stream in 2014. Alumina will be imported to supply the smelter for the intervening period.