September 2024
China: Harbin Xiaoling Cement in Heilongjiang province has taken the environment ministry to court after its approval to operate was rejected following complaints by residents. The cement company’s representatives say the ministry was wrong to overrule a decision by the local authorities in 2011 that granted approval for production at the plant, according to the South China Morning Post.
The ministry took action following complaints by residents about noise and dust pollution. They argued that residents living within 500m of the plant should have been relocated following the recommendation of an environmental review conducted when the plant expanded production in 2009. However, the cement plant has countered that it was built in 1932, whilst the area was under Japanese occupation, before any resident moved to the area.
Zimbabwe: The Cement and Concrete Institute of Zimbabwe has presented a paper to the Ministry of Industry and Commerce suggesting government intervention in the cement industry including banning imported cement. The paper also calls for a protection tariff on imported cement of US$50/t, granting import licences to local producers, cancelling or reviewing all issued permits in circulation in the country and lowering duty on raw materials according to local press.
The country’s cement producers include Lafarge, PPC and Sino Cement. Together they have a cement production capacity of 1.85Mt/yr compared to an estimated demand of 1.17Mt/yr in 2016. Together these cement producers have invested nearly US$185m in cement plants upgrades within the last five years. However, a surplus of cement in the region means that South Africa, Mozambique, Zambia and Botswana export cement to Zimbabwe which is threatening the local producers’ investment.
Lafarge Africa approves acquisition of UNICEM 16 May 2016
Nigeria: The board of directors of Lafarge Africa has approved the acquisition of an additional 50% equity interest in the Untied Cement Company of Nigeria (UNICEM). The purchase was handled on the same terms of its initial acquisition of 35%. Following the acquisition Lafarge Africa will own an indirect interest of 100% in UNICEM.
The 50% share is currently held by Egyptian Cement Holdings, a company jointly owned by LafargeHolcim and Lafarge Africa. LafargeHolcim owns Egyptian Cement Holdings via Holcibel. Lafarge Africa is buying its latest purchase of shares from Holcibel.
Cementos Argos revenue rises by 34% to US$740m 16 May 2016
Colombia: Cementos Argos has reported that its revenue rose by 34% year-on-year to US$740m in the first quarter of 2016 from US$553m in the same period in 2015. Its net income rose by 27% to US$33.4m from US$26.4m. The company attributed the gains to ‘healthy’ sales volumes in all of its markets with a particular emphasis in the US.
By region Cementos Argos saw its cement sales volumes rise by 47.3% to 935,000t in the US led by growth in the Carolinas, Alabama and Georgia. In Colombia its cement volumes fell by 17.1% to 1.48Mt due to lower growth in the central region of the country. Despite this the company increased its revenue in this territory in the quarter. In its Caribbean and Central American region the cement producer reported a rise of 14.4% to 1.11Mt in its cement sales volumes.
Paraguay: Industria Nacional del Cemento (INC) has reported progress on upgrade projects at its cement plants in Vallemi and Villeta. At its plant in Vallemi the company is continuing work on upgrading the fuels that the kiln can use. The project is expected to save up to US$22m/yr. CIE is conducting the work and the launch is scheduled for January 2017.
INC is also building a cement grinding plant at Villeta. The new mill is being built by Sinoma for a cost of US$11.5m and is scheduled for delivery in August 2016. It will have a cement production capacity of 80t/hour or be able to produce around 800,000 bags/month of cement. INC also plans to start operating a pozzolan drying unit at Villeta in September 2016.
Greece: Titan has reported a loss of Euro18.6m for the first quarter of 2016. The figure is a loss compared to the net profit of Euro6.6m it made in the same period in 2015. However, its sales turnover rose by 19% to Euro338m from Euro284m and its earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) rose by 86% to Euro43.3m from Euro23.2m. The company blamed the loss on currency exchange variations particularly from the devaluation of the Egyptian pound against the Euro by 19%.
The group noted that its sales had increased in the quarter in all regions with the exception of Greece. By region it saw strong growth in the US with a 34% in turnover to Euro174m. In Greece construction was mostly limited to government projects limited by the continued economic problems and capital controls. In the group’s south-eastern Europe regions turnover rose by 27.6% to Euro35.8m. In Egypt demand for cement continued to grow helped by the use of solid fuels at its plants. Turnover in the quarter increased by 8.3% to Euro65.3m.
Italy: Cementir has made a loss of Euro6m in the first quarter of 2016. It made a profit before tax of Euro3.8m in the same period in 2015. It reported that its revenue rose by 2.8% to Euro210m from Euro205m. Its sales volumes of grey and white cement rose by 8.7% to 2.01Mt from 1.85Mt.
The Italian cement producer reported strong performances in the Scandinavian countries, Malaysia and Egypt. Sales revenue in Turkey increased in the quarter but this was offset by currency fluctuations. In China revenue fell by 9% year-on-year in the period. In Italy revenue fell by 8% due to a fall in sales volumes of cement.
India: The Heavy Industry Minister Anant Geete has arranged a meeting with officials of the Telangana state government and the Cement Corporation of India (CCI) to discuss the possibility of opening the closed CCI cement plant in Adilabad. The meeting will be held in June 2016 at Hyderabad or New Delhi, according the Hindu newspaper.
The meeting is the second occasion that ministers from Telangana have met with Geete to lobby for the reopening of the CCI plant. Options being considered include privatising the plant or retaining control by the government. The cement plant has a production capacity of 4Mt/yr.
Hyundai Cement could be on sale in 2016 12 May 2016
South Korea: Creditors could put Hyundai Cement on sale in 2016, according to sources quoted by the Korea Herald. The South Korean cement producer has been on a debt management scheme. Its creditors, led by the state-run Korea Development Bank, will be able to complete any sale when the lock-up period on their shares in the company expire at the end of 2016.
Previously the company suffered financially from the misfortunes of its affiliate Sungwoo Engineering & Construction. Sungwoo has since been sold to other investors.
FLSmidth and GE to partner on data platform 12 May 2016
Denmark/US: FLSmidth and GE (formerly General Electric) have announced a partnership to create digital solutions for increasing productivity in the cement and minerals industries. The new solutions developed on GE's cloud-based Predix platform will use FLSmidth's knowledge of cement and minerals processing along with GE's industrial application of networked physical objects (the internet of things) to increase the productivity of connected equipment units in the cement and mining industry.
FLSmidth will build their solutions on top of the Predix platform with applications for managing process flows. This should allow customers to leverage process data and analytics for monitoring, benchmarking their performance and predicting maintenance of their equipment.
"Cement and mining companies already collect significant volumes of data, but currently, only a fraction of it is used. This will be the first available solution for a full coherent process monitoring to leverage optimisation solutions offered by a full service provider like FLSmidth," said FLSmidth’s head of Global Research & Development Jens Almdal.