Table CompaniesAlmalyk Mining and Metallurgical Complex JSC

Initials from the entity name. Click the row to open the full profile.Almalyk Mining and Metallurgical Complex JSCHeavy industry: steel, cement, chemicals, aluminium. Uzbekistan
412 thousand
cars driven for a year
1.9 Mt CO₂e
rising +13%/yr

🔥 Almalyk Mining and Metallurgical Complex JSC ranks #780 because its heavy-industry plants (steel, cement, chemicals) release CO₂ in their core processes.

How much of this entity's emissions could be tied to a named owner.How sure we are about the numbers — based on data coverage, recency and source agreement.Number of power plants or sites attributed to this entity in the Climate TRACE dataset.
Climate Damage Score: 0–100. Bigger means more greenhouse gas this year. Built only from measured emissions and trend.
#780 of 1649

Almalyk Mining and Metallurgical Complex JSC, based in Uzbekistan, runs heavy industry such as steel, cement, chemicals or aluminium. Climate TRACE attributes 3 high-emitting assets to it. Its largest tracked activities are cement production.

High-temperature heatIndustrial furnaces burn large amounts of fuel for process heat.
Process emissionsSome reactions (e.g. making cement clinker) release CO₂ directly, on top of fuel use.
Traps heatThe combined CO₂ adds to global warming.
See the proof

Power plants & sites behind it3 attributed assets · ownership split equally across listed owners

AssetSectorOwnershipAttributedConf.
Kalmakyr MineMineral Extraction100%859.2 ktvery low
AMMC Sherabad Cement PlantManufacturing100%592.6 ktvery low
AMMC Jizzakh Cement PlantManufacturing100%443.5 ktvery low
Where this comes from
Manufacturing · reference year 2024
How it's allowed

Signals below are derived from emissions data and ownership coverage only — not from any legal or regulatory finding.

Permitted Emissions
These emissions appear to occur under existing permits and regulations. Operating legally is not the same as operating cleanly.
Hard-to-Abate Process Emissions
Cement, steel and similar processes emit CO₂ from the chemical reaction itself, not only from burning fuel — making them hard to fully decarbonise.
Rising Emissions Trend
Attributed emissions are rising (~13%/yr), moving in the wrong direction.
Low Measurement Confidence
Measurement confidence for this entity is low; figures are best-available estimates.
No Verified Enforcement or Lobbying Record
This dataset contains no verified enforcement actions, lobbying records, subsidies, or litigation for this entity. Absence of evidence here is not evidence of compliance or of any violation.

Climate Villains makes no claim that any entity has broken any law. These are data-derived signals, not allegations.

Trend
Getting worse +13.3% rising
1.4 Mt1.7 Mt2 Mt20222024

Attributed emissions are rising by about +13.3% per year. Attributed emissions, 2022–2024.

It ranks #780 mainly because its attributed assets emitted about 1.9 Mt CO₂e in 2024 (≈ 412k cars/yr).

The Climate Damage Score is driven by that absolute size on a log scale, with a +1.3-point worsening adjustment.

Score breakdown

Absolute emissions
74 pts
Trend modifier
+13.3% rising+1.3 pts
Data confidence
How sure we are about the measurement. A low score doesn't lower the polluter's rank — it just shows the data is fuzzier.

See the full methodology for how the score is built, or data & coverage for how complete the underlying numbers are.

What we know · what we don't

What we know

  • Attributed emissions: 1.9 Mt CO₂e in 2024 (≈ 412k cars/yr).
  • Primary sector: Manufacturing; primary country: Uzbekistan.
  • Evidence: 3 assets; ~100% ownership-attribution coverage.
  • Source: Climate TRACE (CC BY 4.0).

What we don’t

  • Exact ownership percentages — Climate TRACE lists owners but not stakes, so shared assets are split equally.
  • Indirect (supply-chain / financed / product-use) emissions are not included.
  • No PR claims, lobbying records, litigation history or policy-compliance data are included.
How sure we are about the measurement. A low score doesn't lower the polluter's rank — it just shows the data is fuzzier.How much of this entity's emissions could be tied to a named owner. Higher means a more complete picture.