September 2024
Loesche mills for cement plant in Tanzania 28 January 2014
Tanzania: Loesche GmbH has received an order from Tanga Cement Company Ltd in Tanzania for the supply of two vertical roller mills.
The order covers engineering and supply of two Loesche vertical roller mills, one LM 41.4, which will grind 200t/hr of cement raw material with a fineeness of 15% R 90μm, one LM 19.2 D coal mill with a grinding capacity of 20t/hr. and a fineness of 12% R 90μm. Included in the scope of supply is a rotary star feeder for the raw meal mill and a coal screw feeder for the coal mill. The delivery of the mill key parts is planned for July 2014.
This is Tanga Cement's first order from Loesche. Tanga Cement's plant, which was commissioned in 1978, has a production capacity of 3000t/day.
Assam farmers lay siege on cement company land 27 January 2014
India: The Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti (KMSS), a local residents association in Assam, laid claim to land that belongs to a cement manufacturing company in Assam, India, on 24 January 2014.
KMSS chief, Akhil Gogoi, claimed that Topcem India Ltd had breached an agreed land occupancy by possessing the 55,100m2 of farmland. A panel will prepare a list of farmers, to whom the land will be distributed, by the end of January 2014.
The KMSS has also threatened to occupy land belonging to another cement company. The Federation of Industry and Commerce of the North East Region has condemned the move.
Martin Marietta in advanced talks to acquire Texas Industries 27 January 2014
Update 29 January 2014
US: US construction materials giant Martin Marietta has agreed to purchase Texas Industries (TXI), which has 6Mt/yr of cement capacity and a raft of ready mix concrete facilities in Texas and California, for US$2.7bn.
Martin Marietta's chief executive, C Howard Nye, said, "We like the Texas market a lot. This augments the position we have in Dallas - Fort Worth. The Texas market, for the long term, is one of the most dynamic in the country."
Original story
US: Construction materials maker Martin Marietta Materials is in advanced talks to acquire Texas Industries. Texas Industries currently has a market capitalisation of US$2.15bn. A deal is expected as early as February 2014.
Reports in mid-December 2013 revealed that the owners of Texas Industries were exploring a sale of the company and were working with Citigroup to find a buyer. Texas Industries' largest shareholders, Southeastern Asset Management and NNS Holding, have been seeking to sell their stakes in the company for some time. Combined, the two investors own more than 51% of the company.
Texas Industries has a 6Mt/yr cement production capacity that is expected to grow to almost 8Mt/yr in the next few years. The company reported a second quarter net loss of US$17.6m in January 2014, despite a growth in net sales from US$168m in the second quarter of 2013 to US$209 for the same period of 2014. The net loss was blamed on higher interest expenses.
CBR’s white cement plant in Belgium faces closure 27 January 2014
Belgium: CBR, part of HeidelbergCement Group, has announced that it plans to close its Harmignies white cement plant in Belgium.
Reasons for the potential closure include structural difficulties, high logistics and production costs, an unfavourable geographical location and a decline in the market for white cement. Although a number of restructuring measures were implemented in 2007 and 2013, in addition to investments aimed at lowering production costs, these were not enough to offset the challenges facing the plant.
If the closure goes ahead, 97 jobs could be affected. CBR management and staff representatives will enter into a period of consultation regarding the procedure.
Legal metrology raids on cement warehouses 24 January 2014
India: Legal metrology officials have conducted surprise checks on cement warehouses at Nacharam and Orient Cement facilities in the state of Andhra Pradesh. The officials registered six cases pertaining to various violations on 23 January 2013 and also suspended a district inspector from Adilabad for dereliction of duty.
Legal metrology representatives raided warehouses owned by Birla A1 Premium Orient Cement Ltd, Maha Shakti Cement and NCL Industries Ltd in Nacharam, Andhra Pradesh and found 50kg cement bags that were light by 20-1000g. Following the raids, the officials seized 8210 cement bags from three warehouses.
Also on 23 January 2013, metrology officials conducted searches on Orient Cement Industries in Adilabad, Andhra Pradesh. The officials registered cases for using packing machines without getting them verified by the department.
S Rajeshwar, district inspector of Adilabad, Andhra Pradesh state, was suspended for earlier visiting Orient Cement Industries and deliberately coming back without finding any violations.
Cementos Argos acquires further US cement assets 23 January 2014
US: Colombia's Cementos Argos announced an agreement with US-based Vulcan Materials for the acquisition of cement, concrete, blocks and port assets in Florida, USA worth a total of US$720m. The acquisition will consolidate its participation in the growing market in the south east of the US.
The assets that are part of this transaction increase the Cementos Argos' installed cement capacity by 3.5Mt/yr, thanks to the integrated cement plant Newberry, Florida (1.6Mt/yr) and grinding mills in Tampa and Port Manatee (1.9Mt/yr combined). The deal also features 69 ready mix concrete plants with 372 mixers and an annual production capacity of 3.3 million m3 and 13 concrete block production plants.
"This new transaction fits perfectly with the company's growth strategy, not only for the size and quality of the assets but also because of its privileged location, the growth potential and its complementary operation with our current assets," said Jorge Mario Velasquez, CEO of Cementos Argos. "We are doubling our cement production capacity in the United States, in a market like Florida, where the growth forecast for the coming years is expected to double the already encouraging growth estimates. Florida is one of the fourth largest state economies, with the highest cement consumption and population of the US."
Through this acquisition, Cementos Argos becomes the second-biggest producer of cement in Florida and in the south-east of the US. With this, the company will achieve a total installed capacity, in all of the locations in which it has a presence, of 20Mt/yr.
Brazil: Brazil's antitrust regulator is likely to impose US$1.3bn of fines on six cement producers that were allegedly part of a cartel in the Latin American country.
On 22 January 2014, four of the five members of the board of Brazil's Administrative Council for Economic Defense (Cade) voted for the penalties, while the remaining member requested a review of the process. Under the regulator's rules, during the review period Cade members can change their votes. Cade didn't offer a timetable for a final decision.
According to the current proposal, Brazil's Votorantim Cimentos would be fined US$657m and Switzerland's Holcim would receive a penalty of US$214m. Itabira Agro Industrial would be fined US$173m, Cimpor Cimentos would receive a penalty of US$126m and InterCement, a subsidiary of Camargo Correêa group, would be fined US$102m. In addition, Itambe would receive a fine of US$37.1m. Representatives for companies involved in the investigation couldn't be immediately reached for comment.
Cade said that the cement cartel, which allegedly existed from 1986 - 2007 according to the regulator's investigation, led to increased prices that were passed on to consumers.
Beijing bans new cement, refining, steel, coal and power plants 23 January 2014
China: The city of Beijing will ban the construction of new oil refining, steel, cement and thermal power plants as well as the expansion of existing projects, in accordance with the government's latest policy document aimed at tackling air pollution.
The ban will take effect from March 2014. The policy document, which was approved by local legislature in mid-January 2014, also commits China's capital city to cut total emissions of particulate matter (PM) 2.5 by 5% in 2014.
Beijing was hit by weeks of hazardous smog in January 2013, prompting the central government to pledge tough new measures to improve air quality throughout the country and head off public disquiet about the environmental costs of economic growth.
Competition Commission improves competition in the UK. Again. 22 January 2014
Following a two-year investigation, the UK Competition Commission (CC) has concluded that the UK needs a new cement producer to further encourage competition. Lafarge Tarmac will be required to sell one of its five cement plants. Additionally the CC wants the HeidelbergCement subsidiary Hanson to sell one of its slag grinding plants to increase competition in the supply chain for ground granulated blast furnace slag (GGBS).
The CC's competition investigation estimated that UK customers were cost at least Euro55m/yr between 2007 and 2012 due to high cement and GGBS prices, brought about by a lack of competition. According to Mineral Products Association (MPA) cement sales data, over the same period cement sales in the UK fell from 12Mt in 2007 to 8Mt in 2012.
Although it seems strange that the CC has acted again to support competition in the UK (just one year afterthe Lafarge Tarmac merger) the CC defended its actions in a letter to the December 2013 issue of Global Cement Magazine. According to Rory Taylor, the Lafarge Tarmac merger inquiry could only maintain pre-existing levels of competition, while the investigation's remit was to increase competition if it found a problem.
Explaining their administrative procedures provided little comfort for Lafarge Tarmac, which complained about the ruling. "Its analysis of industry profitability, which is central to its conclusion of Adverse Effect on Competition, is flawed, grossly overestimating the returns made. It has also failed to take into account the new business environment that has been established by our divestments - only 12 months ago - to create a new competitor (Hope Construction Materials), and the entry of new importers into the market."
One such importer, Quinn Cement, popped up this week with news that it is to invest Euro16m in its cement plant at Cavan, Ireland. It has hopes to capture 1% of the mainland British market, making it up to Euro9.6m in the process. Although the CC doesn't think that imports significantly effect cement prices in the UK, those Irish hopes have likely been boosted following the UK CC's decision. Whether it is in the interest of UK consumers remains to be seen. One measure of the CC's activity this time might be the time that passes before its next intervention in the cement industry.
Returning briefly to last week's column (MINT cement focus: Indonesia, GCW133), Holcim Indonesia has reported that its sales fell by 2% in 2013. Growth in the cement industry in Indonesia is by no means assured. Holcim will publish its full annual results for 2013 on 26 February 2014.
Yuri Kozlovsky appointed managing director of Krasnoyarsk Cement 22 January 2014
Russia: Yuri Kozlovsky has been appointed as Managing Director of Krasnoyarsk Cement plant, part of the Sibirsky Cement Holding group. Kozlovsky previously served as the technical director for the plant. He started his career in 1987 at the Topkinsky cement plant, graduated from the Belgorod Technological Institute of Building Materials in 1993 and returned to Topkinsky until 2011.