In 2017 the proportion of Iceland's exports was: , seafood 17%, aluminium 16%, tourism 12%, other 24%.
Tourism Tourism is one of Iceland's largest export sectors. Tourism accounted for more than 12% of the country's GDP in 2017. In October 2017 the tourism sector directly employed around 26,800 people, with the total number of employees in the country being 186,900. At the start of the growth period around 2010, tourism benefited from a weak ISK, but a strong ISK then cooled down the sector. From 2010 to 2018, tourist arrivals in Iceland increased by 378%. putting Iceland at
11th place among aluminium-producing nations worldwide as of 2023.
Rio Tinto Alcan operates Iceland's first aluminium smelter (plant name: ISAL), in
Straumsvík, near the town of
Hafnarfjörður. The plant has been in operation since 1969. Its initial capacity was 33,000
metric tons (t) per year, but it has since been expanded several times and now has a capacity of about 189,000 t/yr. The second plant started production in 1998 and is operated by Norðurál, a wholly owned subsidiary of U.S.-based
Century Aluminum Company. It is located in
Grundartangi in Western Iceland near the town of
Akranes. Its former capacity was 220,000 t/yr but an expansion to 260,000 t/yr has already finished. In 2012, the plant produced 280,000 metric tons which was valued at 610 million dollars or 76 billion krónur. 4,300 gigawatts hours were used in the production that year, amounting to nearly one-fourth of all electrical energy produced in the country. In October 2013, Norðurál announced the start of a five-year project aimed at increasing its production by a further 50,000 t/yr. United States–based aluminium manufacturer
Alcoa runs a plant near the town of
Reyðarfjörður. The plant, known as
Fjardaál (or "aluminium of the
fjords"), has a capacity of 346,000 t/yr and was put into operation in April 2008. To power the plant,
Landsvirkjun built
Kárahnjúkar, a 690-
MW hydropower station. The project was enormous in the context of the Icelandic economy, increasing total installed electric power capacity from under 1,600 MW to around 2,300 MW. According to Alcoa, construction of Fjardaál entailed no human displacement, no impact on
endangered species, and no danger to commercial fisheries; there will also be no significant effect on reindeer, bird and seal populations. However, the project drew considerable opposition from environmentalist groups such as the
World Wide Fund for Nature, which called on Alcoa to abandon the plan to build Fjardaál. In addition, Icelandic singer
Björk was a notable early opponent to the plan; protesting the proposed construction, the singer's mother, Hildur Rúna Hauksdóttir, went on a
hunger strike in 2002. Several other aluminium smelter projects have been planned. Between 2005 and 2011, Alcoa conducted a feasibility study for a second plant in Iceland near
Húsavík. That plant was to have a 250,000 t/yr capacity, to be powered entirely by
geothermal power, although later estimates showed a potential need for other sources of power. In October 2011, Alcoa announced its decision to cancel the Bakki project. In 2006, Nordurál signed a memorandum of understanding with two Icelandic geothermal power producers,
Hitaveita Suðurnesja and
Orkuveita Reykjavíkur, to purchase electricity for its own aluminium reduction project in
Helguvík. The power supplied will initially support aluminium production of 150,000 t/yr, which will eventually grow to support 250,000 t/yr.
Fisheries Fisheries and related sectors—in recent years labelled "the ocean cluster"—was the single most important part of the Icelandic economy (it has now been replaced by tourism) representing an overall contribution to GDP of 27.1% in 2011. The fisheries sector directly employs around 9,000 people (4,900 in fishing and 4,100 in fish processing; approximately 5 per cent of Iceland's workforce), although it is estimated that a total of between 25,000 and 35,000 people (up to 20 per cent of the workforce) depend on the ocean cluster for their livelihood. Many of these jobs are provided by technological companies that manufacture equipment for fisheries firms and by companies engaged in the advanced processing of marine products or in biotechnical production. By contrast, aquaculture remains a very small industry in Iceland, employing only around 250 people for a production of 5,000 tonnes. There have been increased numbers of
Atlantic mackerel (the "Miracle of the Mackerel") in the 21st century as the Atlantic Ocean has slightly warmed.
Finance Banks The Icelandic banking system has been completely overhauled after the
2008 financial crisis. There are now three major
commercial banks:
Landsbankinn (National Bank since 2008),
Arion Bank (formerly
Kaupthing Bank) and
Islandsbanki (formerly Glitnir), and
Kvika banki (formerly MP Straumur). There are smaller banks and some savings banks, however they are not publicly traded. There has been extensive consolidation of smaller banks, with
Sparisjodur Keflavikur being taken over by Landsbanki and Byr being taken over by Islandsbanki. Arion Bank, Islandsbanki, and Kvika Banki are the only banks listed on
Iceland Stock Exchange. Arion Bank is mostly owned by foreign creditors while Landsbanki and Islandsbanki are now wholly owned by the State. The ownership stake of the
Icelandic State in the banks is managed by
Bankasysla rikisins (State Financial Investments), which aims to privatise its shares in the banks in coming years.
Stock market Because of historically persistent inflation, historical reliance on fish production and the long-standing public ownership of the commercial banks, equity markets were slow to develop. Nasdaq Iceland, formerly the
Iceland Stock Exchange (XICE) was created in 1985. Trading in Icelandic T-Bonds began in 1986 and trading in equities commenced in 1990. All domestic trading in Icelandic companies' shares,
bonds and
mutual funds takes place on Nasdaq Iceland. Nasdaq Iceland has used electronic trading systems since its creation. Since 2000,
SAXESS, the joint trading system of the
NOREX alliance, has been used. There are currently two equities markets on Nasdaq Iceland. The
Main Market is the larger and better known of the two. The Alternative Market is a less regulated over-the-counter market. Because of the small size of the market, trading is illiquid in comparison with larger markets. A variety of firms across all sectors of the Icelandic economy are listed on Nasdaq Iceland. The most important
stock market index was the
OMX Iceland 15; however, this index was discontinued after the
2008 financial crisis following a decade in which it had been the worst-performing stock market index in the entire world, being "more or less wiped out."
Other financial markets Historically, investors tended to be reluctant to hold Icelandic bonds because of the persistence of high inflation and the volatility of the króna. What did exist was largely limited to bonds offered by the central government. The bond market on the ICEX has boomed since the 2010s, however, largely because of the resale of mortgages as housing bonds. A
mutual fund market exists on the ICEX in theory, but no funds are currently listed. By the end of 2018,
Bitcoin mining was expected to consume more electricity in Iceland than all the country's residents combined. ==Data==