6-K
GERDAU S.A. (GGB)
U.S.SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 6-K
REPORTOF FOREIGN PRIVATE ISSUER
PURSUANTTO RULE 13a-16 OR 15d-16 UNDER THE
SECURITIESEXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
Dated April 28, 2026
Commission File Number 1-14878
GERDAUS.A.
(Translation of Registrant’s Name into English)
Av. Dra. Ruth Cardoso, 8,501 – 8° andar
São Paulo, São Paulo - Brazil CEP 05425-070
(Address of principal executive offices)
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.
Form 20-F x Form 40-F ¨
Exhibit Index
| Exhibit | Description of Exhibit |
|---|---|
| 99.1 | 1Q26 Earnings Presentation |
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this Report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
Date: April 28, 2026
| GERDAU S.A. | |
|---|---|
| By: | /s/ Rafael Dorneles Japur |
| Name: | Rafael Dorneles Japur |
| Title: | Vice-President and Investor Relations Officer |
Exhibit 99.1
| 1Q26 Earnings<br>Release<br>April 28th, 2026 | |||||
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| DISCLAIMER<br>This document may contain forward-looking statements. These<br>statements are based on estimates, information or methods that may be<br>incorrect or inaccurate and that may not occur. These estimates are<br>also subject to risks, uncertainties, and assumptions that include,<br>among other factors, general economic, political, and commercial<br>conditions in Brazil and in the markets where we operate, as well as<br>existing and future government regulations. Potential investors are<br>cautioned that these forward-looking statements do not constitute<br>guarantees of future performance, given that they involve risks and<br>uncertainties. Gerdau does not undertake, and expressly waives, any<br>obligation to update any of these forward-looking statements, which<br>speak only as of the date they were made. | |||||
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| 3<br>Highlights<br>COMPETITIVE<br>PRESSURE IN BRAZIL<br>LAUNCH OF GERDAU<br>NewEco PRODUCT LINE<br>New product line with lower<br>carbon footprint, offering our<br>customers a competitive and<br>sustainable solution for their<br>decarbonization journeys.<br>Best EBITDA (Adj.) for a first<br>quarter since 2022, accounting<br>for 75% of consolidated EBITDA.<br>STRONG RESULTS IN<br>NORTH AMERICA<br>BARRO ALTO<br>SOLAR COMPLEX<br>Start-up of Barro Alto Solar<br>Complex, in Goiás, underscores<br>the Company’s strategy in<br>pursuing greater competitiveness<br>and sustainability in its<br>operations in Brazil.<br>High import levels and stronger<br>seasonality in the first quarter<br>increased competitive pressure<br>on the domestic market. | |||||
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| 4<br>Financial performance<br>CAPEX:<br>R$ 1.1 b<br>~23% of total Capex planned for the year invested<br>1Q26 DIVIDENDS: Payment as of June 9, 2026<br>R$ 0.18/share<br>R$ 0.08/share<br>GERDAU METALÚRGICA S.A. SHARE<br>BUYBACK PROGRAM<br>ADJUSTED EBITDA :<br>R$ 3.0 b<br>25% quarterly growth with a positive performance<br>across all reportable segments.<br>LEVERAGE:<br>O.74x ND/EBITDA<br>Solid balance sheet with low leverage<br>SHARE BUYBACK2<br>:<br>1 Measurement calculated considering company’s corporate net income | 2 Considers buybacks made through April 10, 2026.<br>Opening of a new buyback program at Metalúrgica Gerdau<br>S.A., of up 10 M preferred shares (GOAU4).<br>% executed | R$ invested:<br>% over outstanding shares:<br>21% | ~R$ 211 m<br>0.6%<br>Gerdau S.A.<br>EARNINGS PER<br>SHARE1<br>:<br>R$ 0.51<br>ADJUSTED<br>NET INCOME:<br>R$ 1.0 b<br>Growth vs. 4Q25: 51% Vs. (R$ 0.66) in 4Q25<br>FREE CASH FLOW:<br>R$ 16 m<br>Positive Free cash flow in a quarter typically<br>characterized by higher working capital.<br>Total of 2026 program: up to 56.4 M shares<br>GERDAU S.A.:<br>METALÚRGICA<br>GERDAU S.A.: ~R$ 106 mi<br>~R$ 354 mi | ||
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| 5<br>Outlook*<br>BRAZIL NORTH AMERICA<br>2Q26: Slight margin recovery 2Q26: Margin growth<br>Continued discipline in capital allocation and execution of the<br>share buyback program<br> ▪ Signs of a gradual recovery in domestic demand amid a still<br>challenging environment;<br> ▪ Slight upward trend in prices across certain product lines,<br>aimed at mitigating increased cost pressures, particularly in<br>logistics and energy/coal;<br> ▪ Follow up of tariff systems renewal;<br>2026<br> ▪ Moderate growth in demand is expected, in line with the IABR,<br>particularly in infrastructure and civil construction;<br> ▪ Monitoring interest rate–sensitive sectors (e.g., automotive,<br>agribusiness, and capital goods), as well as inflationary<br>pressures;<br> ▪ Developments in trade defense measures, including anti-dumping;<br> ▪ Start-up of the Miguel Burnier Mining Project.<br> ▪ Robust order backlog (~90 days) should sustain shipment<br>volumes at a healthy level;<br> ▪ Metal spread expansion (increases in steel prices outpacing<br>changes in scrap costs);<br> ▪ Operational efficiency gains should continue to contribute to<br>the stability of the cost structure.<br>2026<br> ▪ Positive outlook for the renewable energy and data center<br>markets in the short term;<br> ▪ Monitoring of Section 232 potential changes as well as formal<br>review of the USMCA, scheduled for July 2026;<br> ▪ Additional trade barriers in Canada and potential impact on<br>import dynamics in the region;<br> ▪ Start of Phase 1 of the Midlothian (TX) expansion.<br>* This doesnotrepresent guidance. | |||||
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| 6<br>Q&A<br>To ask questions, please indicate your name<br>and institution via Raise Hand icon, wait to be<br>announced<br>.<br>Once announced, accept the prompt to<br>activate your microphone and camera<br>. | |||||
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| ANEXOS<br>7<br>Appendices | |||||
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| Workplace Safety<br>Continued focus on people<br>0.99<br>1.16<br>1.28<br>1.10 1.08<br>0.87 0.83<br>0.76<br>0.70<br>0.59<br>0.73<br>0.84<br>2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 1Q26<br>//<br>2025<br>Deise Nunes-Silva &<br>Ana Flavia Reus Garcia<br>Unidade de Charqueadas 8<br>Accident Frequency Rate¹<br>0.84 in 1Q26<br>1 Number of accidents per Million Hours Worked per each Gerdau employee. | |||||
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| 9<br>QUARTERLY OVERVIEW<br> ◼ Imported steel penetration reached 27% in<br>the quarter, up 2 p.p. versus 4Q25, and<br>remained the main pressure on the<br>domestic market;<br> ◼ Lower shipment volumes reflected stronger<br>seasonality in the first months of 2026, with<br>both domestic and export markets<br>contracting amid weaker global demand;<br> ◼ Net sales were 13% lower than in 4Q25,<br>driven by lower shipment volumes and a still<br>pressured pricing environment;<br> ◼ Cost of goods sold per tonne was 5% lower<br>than in 4Q25, benefited from lower costs<br>following maintenance shutdowns, which<br>offset input and freight cost pressures.<br>UTILIZATION<br>RATE<br>~45%<br>Industry, Agriculture and Others<br>~40%<br>Civil construction<br>~15%<br>Automotive<br>PRODUCT PORTFOLIO¹ MARKETS OF OPERATION¹<br>30%<br>40%<br>20%<br>10%<br>Rebar and Reinforced<br>Concrete<br>Bars, Beams,<br>SBQ and Others<br>Hot Rolled<br>Coils<br>and Plates<br>Slabs and Other<br> ¹ The participation values of products and markets are approximate and do not refer to 1Q26 volumes.<br>Long Steel<br>70%<br>Flat Steel<br>30%<br>BRAZIL<br>Shipments<br>(1,000 tonnes)<br>Net Sales<br>(R$ million)<br>EBITDA<br>(R$ million and margin)<br>1Q25 4Q25 1Q26<br>1,431 1,463<br>1,324<br>-9.5%<br>1Q25 4Q25 1Q26<br>7,494 7,181<br>6,271<br>-12.7%<br>510 578<br>1Q25 4Q25 1Q26<br>1,096<br>+13.3%<br>14.6% 7.1% 9.2%<br>Rolled Steel 60%<br>Crude<br>Steel 74% | |||||
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| Lack of level playing field and<br>ineffective trade defense measures<br>Steel imports remain on<br>track to reach a new<br>record in 2026<br>Steel import penetration rate<br>TRADE DEFENSE<br>10<br>11.2% 10.9%<br>16.3%<br>15.4%<br>20.8% 20.8%<br>24.0%<br>26.8%<br>9.2%<br>7.1%<br>13.9%<br>11.2%<br>15.2% 15.0% 15.8% 15.8%<br>10.4%<br>9.3%<br>15.3%<br>13.6%<br>18.5% 18.5%<br>20.8%<br>22.7%<br>2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 1Q26<br>Flat Long Total<br>0.6 0.4<br>1.4 0.9 1.6 1.7 1.9<br>0.4<br>1.3 1.5 1.5<br>2.6<br>2.2<br>2.8 3.1<br>3.9<br>1.1<br>3.4<br>2.2 2.0<br>4.0<br>3.1<br>4.4 4.8<br>5.8 6.3<br>0.0<br>1.0<br>2.0<br>3.0<br>4.0<br>5.0<br>6.0<br>7.0<br>8.0<br>9.0<br>2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026e<br>Under Gerdau Portfolio<br>Out of Gerdau Portfolio<br>1.7<br>4.5<br>China<br>65% New<br>Origens<br>12%<br>Others<br>23%<br> ¹<br>Import Tariffs Anti-dumping<br>25% tariff<br>7 NCMs for drawn products<br>4 NCMs for drawn products<br>10 NCMs: 7 flat steel and 3 long steel<br>4 NCMs: 1 flat steel e 3 long steel<br>Quota + 25% tariff<br>16 NCMs: 12 flat steel and 4 long steel<br>8 NCMs: 5 flat steel and 3 long steel<br>Flat bar<br>(alloy steel)<br>Plates<br>Hot-rolled coils<br>Wire rod<br>Production chain mobilization<br>Other industrial sectors working on<br>trade defense issues<br>Surcharge claim: screws / automotive<br>(for hybrid and electric vehicles / wind<br>turbines)<br>Valid<br>through<br>Jun 2026<br>Valid<br>through<br>Jun 2026<br>Valid<br>through<br>Feb 2027<br>Valid through 2027<br>Positive preliminary<br>decision<br>Expected in 2H 2026<br>Valid through 2030<br>Source: Comexstat Source:BrazilSteel Institute 1 NewOrigins:Egypt,Peru,Russia,Vietnam, India, Indonesia, HongKong,Thailand, Malaysia,Singapore,andTaiwan.<br>Jan-Mar/26<br>annualized | |||||
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| 11<br>Shipments<br>(1,000 tonnes)<br>Net Sales<br>(R$ million)<br>EBITDA<br>(R$ million and margin)<br>QUARTERLY OVERVIEW<br> ◼ Shipment volume was 5% higher than in<br>4Q25, driven by the typical recovery<br>following year-end seasonality, driven by<br>the non-residential construction and<br>renewable energy segments, as well as<br>stronger demand from the distribution<br>channel;<br> ◼ Backlog remained above the average of<br>recent quarters (~70 days), ending 1Q26 at<br>over 90 days;<br> ◼ Net sales were 8% higher than in 4Q25,<br>reflecting higher volumes and prices, in<br>line with the growth strategy focused on<br>improving the product mix;<br> ◼ Cost of goods sold per tonne remained<br>stable versus 4Q25, with efficiency gains<br>offsetting scrap and energy cost<br>pressures. 45%<br>50%<br>Bars<br>Shapes<br>5%<br>Downstream<br>~40%<br>Non-residential Construction and<br>Infrastructure<br>~60%<br>Manufacturing, Energy, and<br>Automotive<br>Long<br>Steel<br>100%<br> ¹ The participation values of products and markets are approximate and do not refer to 1Q26 volumes.<br>NORTH AMERICA UTILIZATION<br>RATE<br>1Q25 4Q25 1Q26<br>1,229 1,221 1,276<br>+4.5%<br>1Q25 4Q25 1Q26<br>8,768 8,695 9,349<br>+7.5%<br>1Q25 4Q25 1Q26<br>1,198<br>1,832<br>2,252<br>+22.9%<br>13.7%<br>21.1% 24.1%<br>PRODUCT PORTFOLIO¹ MARKETS OF OPERATION¹<br>Rolled Steel 89% Crude<br>Steel 88% | |||||
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| Shipments<br>(1,000 tonnes)<br>Net Sales<br>(R$ million)<br>EBITDA<br>(R$ million and margin)<br>12<br>97% UTILIZATION<br>RATE<br>Rolled Steel Crude<br>Steel 73%<br>QUARTERLY OVERVIEW<br>80%<br>20%<br>Bars & Beams<br>Downstream & Others ~70%<br>Distribution (semi-finished)<br>~20%<br>Civil construction<br>~10%<br>Industry<br>SOUTH AMERICA<br>237<br>297 306<br>1Q25 4Q25 1Q26<br>+3.0%<br>1Q25 4Q25 1Q26<br>1,366<br>1,488 1,396<br>-6.2%<br>188<br>174 186<br>1Q25 4Q25 1Q26<br>+6.6%<br>13.8% 11.7% 13.3%<br>PRODUCT PORTFOLIO¹ MARKETS OF OPERATION¹<br>Long Steel<br>100%<br> ◼ Steel shipments up 3% versus 4Q25, driven<br>by higher volumes in Peru, supported by<br>stronger construction demand;<br> ◼ Net sales were 6% lower than in 4Q25 due<br>to a less favorable sales mix in Argentina<br>(with a higher share of exports), as well as<br>prices pressured by weak domestic<br>demand;<br> ◼ Cost of goods sold per tonne 11% lower<br>than 4Q25, reflecting lower maintenance<br>costs and improved rolling mill efficiency in<br>Peru, resulting in the best performance of<br>the last seven quarters.<br> ¹ The participation values of products and markets are approximate and do not refer to 1Q26 volumes. | |||||
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| Operational performance<br>1 Non-accounting measurement prepared by the Company. The Company states the Adjusted EBITDA to provide additional information on cash generated in the period. | 2 I Includes iron ore and co-products sales.<br>Importance of geographic diversification for resilient results<br>ADJUSTED EBITDA (R$ million) and ADJUSTED EBITDA MARGIN ¹ NET SALES² (R$ million)<br>North Am. Brazil South Am. Eliminations<br>(391)<br>Eliminations<br>1,396<br>(301)<br>1,488<br>Net Sales<br>4Q25<br>654<br>North Am.<br>(910)<br>Brazil<br>(92)<br>South Am.<br>90<br>16,974 16,716<br>8,695<br>7,181<br>9,349<br>6,271<br>Net Sales<br>1Q26<br>-2%<br>-171<br>420<br>(141)<br>509<br>174<br>EBITDA 4Q25 North Am.<br>69<br>Brazil<br>12<br>South Am.<br>84<br>Eliminations<br>578<br>186 (57)<br>EBITDA 1Q26<br>2,374<br>14.0%<br>2,958<br>17.7%<br>2,252<br>1,832<br>+25%<br>4Q25 vs.<br>1Q26<br>(80)<br>578<br>186<br>(57)<br>188<br>EBITDA 1Q25 North Am.<br>(518)<br>Brazil<br>(3)<br>South Am.<br>23<br>Eliminations<br>2,402<br>13.8%<br>2,958<br>17.7%<br>1,198 2,252<br>1,096<br>1,055<br>EBITDA 1Q26<br>+23%<br>(253) (301)<br>Eliminations<br>1,366 1,396<br>Net Sales 1Q25<br>581<br>North Am.<br>(1,223)<br>Brazil<br>30<br>South Am.<br>(48)<br>17,375 16,716<br>8,768<br>7,494<br>9,349<br>6,271<br>Net Sales 1Q26<br>1Q25 vs. -4%<br>1Q26<br>13 | ||||
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| 14<br>Cash flow & net cash variation<br>1<br>Includes thecash effect of customers, inventories,andsuppliersaccounts. | 2<br>Includes the addition of R$1.2billionin CAPEX investments in 1Q26, adjusted for the cash effect ofthechange in accounts payable to Property, plant, and equipment<br>suppliersin theamount of R$70million, relatedto acquisitions from previousperiodspaid in the currentperiod. | 4<br>Includes the payment ofinterest on loans and financing andinterest on lease. | 5 ProportionalEBITDA ofthe joint venturesnet of<br>dividendsreceivedfrom these JVs. | 6 Disbursements for otherintangibleassets and lease payments. | 7 Other changes includeOther Assetsand Liabilities accounts.<br>CASH FLOW<br>(R$ million)<br>NET CASH VARIATION<br>(R$ million)<br>4Q25 Cash 1Q26 Free<br>Cash Flow<br>Financing<br>Variation<br>Dividends Share buyback M&A Exchange<br>variation & other<br>1Q26 Cash<br>6,375<br>16 (218) (187) (206) 4 (194)<br>5,590<br>2,958<br>1Q26<br>Adjusted<br>EBITDA<br>(980)<br>Working<br>Capital 1<br>(93)<br>Income Tax 2<br>(1,168)<br>CAPEX3<br>(71)<br>Interest4<br>(258)<br>JVs<br>Proportional<br>EBITDA 5<br>(149)<br>Intangibles<br>and Leasing 6<br>(223)<br>Other 7<br>16<br>1Q26 Free<br>Cash Flow |
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| CASH, DEBT, AND LEVERAGE<br>(R$ billion)<br>LIQUIDITY POSITION AND DEBT AMORTIZATION1<br>(R$ billion)<br>RATINGS:<br> ¹ Global Revolving Credit Facility<br>POLÍTICA FINANCEIRA GERDAU:<br>15<br>GROSS DEBT<br> < R$12 BILLION<br>AVERAGE TERM<br> > 6 YEARS<br>NET DEBT /EBITDA<br> ≤1.5X BBB STABLE BBB STABLE Baa2 STABLE<br>GERDAU FINANCIAL POLICY :<br>7.6<br>6.9<br>1Q25<br>9.1<br>9.0<br>2Q25<br>8.8<br>9.9<br>3Q25<br>7.8<br>6.4<br>4Q25<br>8.2<br>5.6<br>1Q26<br>14.5<br>18.1 18.6<br>14.2 13.8<br>Net Debt Cash<br>0.69x<br>0.85x 0.81x 0.76x 0.74x<br>Gross Debt Net debt/Adjusted EBITDA<br>Liquidity & indebtedness<br>Cash & Equiv. RCF ¹ Bonds Debentures Bank loans<br>Liquidity<br>0.4<br>2026 2027<br>0.1<br>2028<br>0.1<br>2029<br>0.4<br>2032 2035<br>0.3<br>2036<br>onwards<br>10.2<br>4.6<br>5.6<br>0.9<br>0.9<br>1.5 1.5 1.4<br>3.4 2.8<br>AVERAGE COST<br>7.8 years<br>AVERAGE TERM<br>BRL: CDI – 0.18% Y/Y<br>USD: 6.12% Y/Y<br>15 | |||||
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| Return to shareholders<br>Continued share buyback and distribution of dividends<br>above the mandatory minimum<br>2026 Share Buyback Program<br>- Gerdau S.A.<br> ◼Total for the program: up to 56.4<br>million shares<br> ◼Financial volume repurchased as<br>of April 10, 2026: R$210.7 million<br>GGBR4/GGBR3<br> ◼Cancellation of 65% of the total<br>repurchased<br>To repurchase<br>Repurchased<br>21%<br>79%<br>244 230<br>555<br>198<br>354<br>281<br>492<br>213<br>183<br>206<br>1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q261<br>525<br>722 769<br>381<br>560<br>73.7% 89.9% 74.9%<br>-30.9%<br>58.8%<br>Dividends distributed (R$ million) Buyback (R$ million) Payout²<br>DISTRIBUTION OF DIVIDENDS<br>AMOUNT<br>PER SHARE<br>R$ 354.1 mi<br>R$ 0.18<br>1Q26<br>Gerdau S.A.<br>R$106.0 m<br>R$ 0.08<br>Metalúrgica Gerdau S.A.<br>1 Dividends consider the amounts resolved to be paid on June 9,2026 and buyback considers operations carried out until March 31, 2026. | 2 Measurement calculated<br>considering payout and shares repurchased divided by the parent company’s corporate net income after recording the reserves provided for in its Bylaws.<br>New 2026 Share Buyback Program -<br>Metalúrgica Gerdau S.A.<br> ◼GOAU4: up to 10 million preferred shares,<br>equivalent to 0.8% of the outstanding shares<br> ◼ 18-month term (Oct 2027)<br>16 | ||||
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| CAPEX<br>Investments in business growth, competitiveness, and<br>maintenance<br>17<br>2026e¹<br>Maintenance Coking plants +<br>blast furnaces Competitiveness<br>2.3<br>1.8<br>0.6<br>R$4.7 b²<br>1 Doesnotinclude investments injointly-controlled entitiesandassociates.<br>2 Exposure by currency: 2026, ~55% in USD and ~45% in BRL.<br>1Q26¹<br>0.5<br>0.6<br>R$1.1 b<br>Miguel Burnier sustainable mining<br>platform– grinding<br>17 | |||||
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| Competitiveness CAPEX<br>Main Projects: status 1Q26<br>MIGUEL BURNIER MINING<br>PHYSICAL<br>PROGRESS<br>FINANCIAL<br>PROGRESS<br>94% 87%<br>Grinding<br>START-UP: SECOND SEMESTER OF 2026<br>POTENTIAL EBITDA: ~ R$1.1 BILLION<br>CAPEX: ~ R$3.6 BILLION<br>SCRAP PROCESSING<br>PINDAMONHANGABA<br>Scrap Yard<br>PHYSICAL<br>PROGRESS<br>FINANCIAL<br>PROGRESS<br>82% 77%<br>START-UP: SECOND SEMESTER OF 2026<br>POTENTIAL EBITDA: ~R$100 MILLION<br>CAPEX: ~ R$ 400 MILLION<br>MIDLOTHIAN EXPANSION<br> “PHASE 1”<br>Steel Processing Facility<br>PHYSICAL<br>PROGRESS<br>FINANCIAL<br>PROGRESS<br>75% 91%<br>START-UP (PHASE 1): SECOND SEMESTER OF 2026<br>POTENTIAL EBITDA: ~R$ 275 MILLION<br>CAPEX: ~ R$ 1.2 BILLION<br>18 | |||||
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| Barro Alto Solar Complex<br>Reinforces the renewable energy matrix, competitiveness, and regional development<br>19<br>Barro Alto Solar Complex<br>Business model: 7 Special Purpose Entities (SPEs) = 3 Gerdau SPEs + 4 Newave Energia SPEs<br>With this Complex, Gerdau reaches 42% self-generation of its total energy consumption, with<br>the complex accounting for 13% of the Company’s<br>electricity consumption in Brazil.<br>Gerdau self-generation: ~48 MWm (Own SPEs) + ~25 MWm (through 40% stake in Newave Energia)<br>Barro Alto strengthens Gerdau’s self-generation<br>strategy, enhancing cost predictability and<br>reducing exposure to the spot market.<br>START-UP March 2026<br>19<br>SUSTAINABILITY<br>+40,000 tCO₂e/year<br>Emissions avoided annually<br>INVESTMENT<br>R$ 1.3 b<br>BRL 600 million invested directly by Gerdau,<br>with the remaining amount via Newave Capital.<br>ESTIMATED GENERATION<br>Average 111 MWm<br>Sufficient to supply a city of<br>350,000 inhabitants<br>INSTALLED CAPACITY<br>452 MWp<br>Largest photovoltaic generation<br>project in the state of Goiás | |||||
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| Siga a Gerdau nas redes sociais.<br>Earnings<br>Release 2Q26<br>August 4,2026<br>Videoconference<br>August 5,2026<br>inform@gerdau.com | ri.gerdau.com | ||||
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