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CORRECTED-Demand from U.S. automakers could boost aluminium price -Japan industry body

(Corrects paragraph 9 to show target is 6.5 mln T, not 650,000 T, and that current demand is 4 mln T)

* Ford plans to launch aluminium-intensive truck, others could follow

* Could push aluminium price to $2,500 per T -Japan industry body

* Premiums paid by Japanese buyers are too high -industry group

TOKYO, July 11 (Reuters) - Prices for aluminium could climb around a third to as high as $2,500 per tonne if more U.S. automakers start producing vehicles made from the metal, said the new head of Japan's aluminium industry body.

Ford Motor plans to launch a new aluminium-intensive truck this year, with speculation that other carmakers could start using more of the metal, which is lighter than steel and helps make vehicles more fuel-efficient.

"If automakers follow Ford's step to use more aluminium, supply of the metal will become short and prices could rise as high as around $2,500 per tonne," Takashi Ishiyama, chairman of the Japan Aluminium Association, said on Thursday.

He said that association members such as producers of rolled aluminium would be able to pass on a gradual increase in prices to their customers, and that they would welcome the chance to use current inventory to make products they could sell at higher prices.

London Metal Exchange aluminium prices, which hit a 13-month high earlier this week, stood around $1,900 per tonne on Friday.

Ishiyama said that Ford would need supply from the equivalent of a whole smelting plant to churn out its new F-150 trucks, providing a big new source of demand.

He added that some Japanese aluminium product makers such as top manufacturer UACJ Corp were aiming to win a bigger slice of the growing U.S. market by adding production facilities there.

But Ishiyama, also the president of Nippon Light Metal Holdings Co Ltd, said Japanese automakers had been trying to improve car efficiency through technological advances rather than shifting to aluminium vehicles.

"However, we have a long-term goal to aim to boost aluminium demand in Japan to 6.5 million tonnes a year by 2035 from 4 million tonnes now by widening the metal uses to new areas including automobiles," Ishiyama said.

RECORD PREMIUMS

Ishiyama said that the premiums buyers must pay over LME cash prices to secure physical metal are far too high, as actual freight, insurance and other costs to get metal delivered would be around 10 percent of current premiums.

Aluminium buyers in Japan have mostly agreed to pay record premiums of $400-$408 per tonne over LME prices for July-September shipments, up 8-12 percent from the previous quarter.

The country is Asia's biggest importer of the metal, and the fee sets the benchmark for the region.

The premiums, which have nearly doubled from two years ago and risen five-fold from five years ago, come as smelter shutdowns and logjams in releasing metal from LME storage have squeezed global supply.

He said that while association members could pass on gradual rises in LME prices to their customers, it was more difficult to do the same with soaring premiums.

"In some deals, we can pass on the cost of the metal and premiums, but we have more cases which we can't do that." (Reporting by Yuka Obayashi; Editing by Joseph Radford)