Displaying items by tag: GCW330
Cigarettes go up in smoke for Holcim Philippines
27 November 2017Philippines: Around 4.748 million packs of cigarettes worth US$2.8m and owned by Mighty Corporation, which is being wound up amid tax evasion charges, were destroyed on Sunday at the Geocycle Compound of Holcim Philippines in Bunawan, Davao City. They were used as an alternative fuel in the plant’s kiln to produce cement.
The cigarettes with counterfeit stamps were discovered at the warehouse owned by Sunshine Cornmill Co., Distribution in General Santos City in a joint operation conducted by members of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) and the Bureau of Customs (BOC) on 6 March 2017.
"The incineration we will witness today is intended to deliver this message,” said Kelvin Lee, Assistant Secretary of the Office of the Executive Secretary. “Tax evasion does not pay. We will confiscate the offending products and destroy them. No one will profit from the commission of a crime.”
Global Cement would argue that Holcim Philippines is a beneficiary in this process, presumably having gained free alternative fuel!
Dangote inaugurates Mfila plant in Congo
24 November 2017Congo: Dangote Cement commissioned its new Mfila plant in the Republic of Congo on 23 November 2017. The 1.5Mt/yr integrated facility, which cost US$300m to construct, will employ around 1000 direct workers and contribute to the creation of many indirect jobs. It is the largest cement plant in the country.
At the inauguration ceremony, Congo’s President Denis Sassou Nguesso said that the construction of the plant marked part of an ‘industrial revolution’ in the Economic Community of Central African States (CEMAC). He said that Congo was happy to host Dangote Cement, which he had observed operating to the benefit of other sub-Saharan African countries. He said that the timing of Dangote’s investment was fortunate as the country needed to diversify its economy in light of falling oil revenues.
The Nigerian President Mohammadu Buhari was represented at the event by a delegation led by the Minister of Mines and Steel Development, Dr Kayode Fayemi. He commended Aliko Dangote for contributing to the economic development of Africa and said that his ‘sterling accomplishment’ made Dangote Cement a ‘worthy ambassador’ of Nigeria.
PPC results could fuel more acquisition interest
24 November 2017South Africa: PPC has seen its net profit rise significantly in the six months to September 2017. It nearly tripled its profit year-on-year to US$21.1m from US$7.3m.
The company benefited particularly from a strong performance from its assets outside of South Africa. Its earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) from its non-domestic assets rose by 25%, while group EBITDA grew by 4% to US$86m. The results bode well for a potential bidding war that now favours PPC shareholders.
Earlier in the week, PPC effectively rejected a conditional partial offer from AfriSam and Canada’s Fairfax Group for the company, stating that it undervalued the company. This latest set of results brings this assessment into sharper focus and may give cause for CRH and LafargeHolcim to think again about the values of their own non-binding offers, should PPC also be of the view that these also undervalue the company.
Eagle starts construction of Cebu plant
24 November 2017Philippines: Eagle Cement has started construction of a US$246m cement plant in Malabuyoc, Cebu, as part of a wider expansion drive. The 2Mt/yr plant will have dedicated terminals for domestic transit of cement and export. It will take Eagle Cement’s capacity to 9.1Mt/yr once it and an expansion at the company’s Bulacan plant are completed. Cebu will come online in 2020, with the Bulacan expansion completed in 2018.
"We are expanding more to new markets such as Southern Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao,” said Eagle’s President and CEO Paul Ang. “By 2018, our third line in Bulacan will be fully functional to serve those areas, with the most efficient and energy saving manufacturing technology.”
Pakistan’s exports down amid stronger domestic consumption
24 November 2017Pakistan: According to the All Pakistan Cement Manufacturers Association (APCMA) Pakistan’s cement exports continued to decline in October 2017. Exports fell by 14.6% month-on-month to 443,000t, due in part to higher domestic cement consumption. However the APCMA stated that falling exports were a concern while some Pakistani cement capacity remains idle.
The largest fall in exports was via sea, rather than overland exports to immediate neighbours. This was despite the northern part of the country, closest to India and Afghanistan, consuming 3.14Mt of cement. This is the first time that the region has consumed more than 3Mt in a single month. In October 2016 the north of Pakistan consumed 2.5Mt of cement. In the south, demand also increased from 0.52Mt in October 2016 to 0.63Mt in October 2017.
Report claims Lafarge Syria paid US$5.6m to groups in Syria
24 November 2017Syria: A report into the alleged activities of Lafarge Syria, now part of LafargeHolcim, claims that the company paid a total of US$5.6m to a number of local factions in Syria, including to the Islamic State group, between July 2012 and September 2014. The report by the US consultant Baker McKenzie in collaboration with PricewaterhouseCoopers was first reported upon by the French satirical weekly Le Canard enchaîne (The Chained Duck).
According to Le Canard enchaîne, a large portion of the payments were paid to ensure the safety of local staff and the free movement of Lafarge trucks, often blocked by fighters at checkpoints. Groups were also reportedly paid as suppliers, as they controlled access to heavy fuel oil or certain raw materials in part of the region. The document prepared by Baker McKenzie states that the Islamic State group could have collected at least US$500,000. The French Ministry of the Economy took legal action in 2016 on possible offenses committed by the cement group Lafarge by operating a plant in Syria, despite EU bans.
LafargeHolcim has maintained its stance that it ‘deeply regrets and condemns the unacceptable mistakes made in Syria’ and states that it called a central investigation as soon as it became aware of the irregularities. On 14 November 2017, police raided LafargeHolcim's offices in Paris and those of its 9.4% shareholder Groupe Bruxelles Lambert (GBL) in Brussels, Belgium. An investigation into the activities continues.
New Korean-backed plant for Uzbekistan
23 November 2017Uzbekistan: The South Korean company Evergreen Holdings has announced plans to build a cement plant in Karakalpakstan, Uzbekistan. An agreement was signed in Seoul between the representatives of Uzkurilishmaterialary and Evergreen on 22 November 2017.
The total cost of the project exceeds US$300m. Evergreen Holdings intends to implement the investment in several stages based on the demand in Uzbekistan and neighbouring countries. The first stage will involve an investment of at least US$60m.
Uzbekistan currently has five large cement plants: Kyzylkumcement, Akhangarancement, Kuvasaycement, Bekabadcement and Djizzakh Cement plant, as well as a number of small enterprises. Their total capacity exceeds 8.5Mt/yr but
Uzbekistan wants to increase production to over 17Mt/yr in the period to 2022.
PPC rejects Fairfax offer
23 November 2017South Africa: PPC has said that its independent board would not recommend Canadian firm Fairfax Africa Investments' partial offer to shareholders, considering it neither fair nor reasonable. In September 2017 Fairfax offered to buy 22% of PPC for US$144m on the condition that PPC accepted a merger proposal with rival AfriSam.
"The Independent Expert, having considered two possible outcomes of the proposed merger, is of the opinion that the partial offer, both in the context of the proposed merger as well as on a stand-alone basis, is not fair and reasonable," said PPC in a statement.
Coal hopper fire at GCC Dacotah plant
23 November 2017US: Rapid City Fire Department crews quickly extinguished a potentially dangerous fire inside a coal hopper at the GCC Dacotah Cement Plant on 21 November 2017.
The plant suffered little damage and no injuries were reported. According to fire department spokesman Jim Bussell, crews attended the plant at 07:40.
The first crew found dark smoke coming from inside a building containing the coal hopper. Due to the inherent volatility of coal dust, the firefighters made a careful entry into the building and quickly dealt with the fires. Bussell said that GCC Dacotah's comprehensive emergency response plan, implemented after a review by both the cement plant and fire department officials in mid 2016, helped to minimise the effects of the fire. "This open dialogue and communication was key to a safe, quick response and resolution of the incident," Bussell said in a release.
Bussell added that GCC Dacotah expected no disruption to plant operations because the fire was in a part of the plant that is in the middle of a US$90m expansion project.
The cause of the fire remains under investigation.