September 2024
HarbisonWalker International elects Carol Jackson as chairman and chief executive officer 05 July 2017
US: The board of directors of HarbisonWalker International (HWI) has elected Carol Jackson as its chairman and chief executive officer (CEO) following the retirement of Stephen Delo. He will assume the new position on 1 July 2017. Jackson currently works as senior vice president and general manager at HWI.
Delo was the chairman and CEO at HWI for three and a half years. During his tenure the company combined three US refractories companies together and rebranded them as HWI. Previously, he held several roles at Honeywell International, including positions in chemicals, operating systems, and integrated supply chain.
Austria: Lindner has appointed four new members of its international sales team to cover the Americas and Asia. Christopher Howard has become the general manager for Lindner America covering the shredder manufacturer’s North American operations. Jeff Wolfe has become the sales manager for Lindner America’s Waste Division. Frederico Hartmann has responsibility for the company’s plastics division in Latin America. Gerhard Gamper becomes a sales manger in the Waste Division for Asia.
France: LafargeHolcim has launched a Euro100m upgrade to build a new clinker production line at its Martres cement plant in Tolosane. Construction work on the new line will start in the third quarter of 2018 and will be completed in mid-2020. A key feature of the upgrade will be a focus on using alternative fuels in the new kiln, particularly tyres. Following the project’s completion the plant will have a substitution rate of 80% from 30% at present.
The project, the largest investment made by the group in France for 40 years, is part of a wider package of Euro300m for France that the company announced in 2016. Tenders for the project at Martres will be issued in early 2018. LafargeHolcim has also made a point of saying that priority will be given to local, French and European companies. Previously the French media published concerns that the project might be awarded to a Chinese contractor.
India: Ambuja Cement has purchased a limestone block in the Chandrapur district of Maharashtra. An estimated limestone resource of 42Mt was acquired via state auction for a price of 125% of the value of mineral dispatched. Formal confirmation via the state government is expected to follow soon.
Vietnam: Siam City Cement Vietnam plans to invest up to U$50m on its cement plants in the next six to 12 months. The Thai-owned cement producer purchased Holcim Vietnam in March 2017, according to the Saigon Times Daily newspaper. It operates plants in Kien Giang, Ba Ria-Vung Tau and Dong Nai provinces and in Ho Chi Minh City.
Cement production picks up in Panama 05 July 2017
Panama: Data from the Treasury Inspector's Office in Panama reports that cement production rose by 7.5% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2017. The construction sector as a whole grew by 6.6% due to residential and non-residential projects, according to the La Estrella de Panama newspaper. However, infrastructure work decreased at the same time.
Buzzi Unicem completes acquisition of Zillo Group 04 July 2017
Italy: Buzzi Unicem has completed its acquisition of Zillo Group with its acquisition of the remaining 52.1% of the share capital of Cementizillo. Following the acquisition it now owns 100% of the company. The agreement was originally announced in mid-June 2017. Buzzi Unicem has paid Euro19m plus 450,000 shares in Buzzi Unicem for its purchase of the majority stake in Cementizillo. Further payments will follow with an additional variable payment of up to Euro21m depending on the average price of Buzzi Unicem cement in Italy from 2017 to 2020.
Vietnam: Trinh Dinh Dung, the Deputy Prime Minster, has inaugurated the second production line at the Thanh Thang Cement plant at Thanh Nghi, Ha Nam. The new line has a production capacity of 1.3Mt/yr and it will raise the plant’s total capacity to 1.75Mt/yr, according to the Viet Nam News newspaper. The company has invested US$220m in the upgrade project.
Trinh Dinh Dung also said at the event that the Ministry of Construction would have to review the master plan for the cement industry in the 2017 - 2025 period with a vision towards 2035, and the master plan for exploration, exploitation and use of minerals for cement production by 2025. He urged domestic cement manufacturers to comply with environmental protection requirements, and invest in new technology to improve the quality of their products and protect the environment.
Ciments de l'Afrique secures loan from West African Development Bank for Burkina Faso project 04 July 2017
Burkina Fasa: The West African Development Bank (BOAD) has granted a US$10m short term loan to Ciments de l'Afrique (CIMAF) for the import of raw materials for the production of cement to be sold locally. Morocco’s CIMAF operates a cement grinding plant at Ouagadougou and it is building another at Bobo-Dioulasso that is expected to be completed in mid-2018.
Turkey: Brazil’s Votorantim is set to inaugurate a Euro140m upgrade project at its Sivas cement plant. The project has been part of the cement producer’s strategy to increase its revenue outside of Brazil, according to the Valor Economico newspaper. The upgrade has seen the plant’s cement production capacity rise to 1.8Mt/yr from 0.6Mt/yr. Prior to the investment the plant accounted for around 19% of Votorantim’s 3Mt/yr production in Turkey and once fully operational it will account for 42%. The plant will supply the market with CEM I and CEM II products.
Company president Walter Dissinger said that international sales account for 40% of group revenue. However it is hoped that this will recede to 30% once the Brazilian market starts to recover. The company is also building an upgrade at its Charlevoix plant in the US.