September 2024
Holcim Philippines records profit boom 02 March 2020
Philippines: Holcim Philippines has recorded a profit of US$70.9m in 2019, up by 41% from US$50.3m in 2018. This was in spite of a 5.9% year-on-year sales fall to US$660m from US$701m in 2018. The Philippines Star newspaper has reported that a more favourable product mix and the steady contribution of its aggregates unit helped Holcim Philippines to offset the effects of slowing construction activity throughout the year. Holcim Philippines president and CEO John Stull said that the company is ‘well-positioned to deliver sustainable and healthy growth to shareholders and continue support to the country’s development.’
In 2019 Holcim Philippines brought its total production capacity to 10Mt/yr with the completion of upgrades at its integrated Bulacan, Davao and La Union plants. In March 2019 it launched Solido, a blended cement suited to use in road and infrastructure construction.
Vietnam: Vietnamese cement production rose by 0.1% year-on-year to 13.0Mt in January and February 2019 from 12.9Mt in the opening two months of 2018. Vietnam Daily News has reported that February was an especially voluminous month for production. The country produced 6.7Mt of cement over its 29 days, up by 18.6% year-on-year from 5.6Mt in February 2018.
Two new plants, with a shared capacity of 7.1Mt/yr, are due in 2020.
Algeria: Public Industrial Cement Group of Algeria (GICA) subsidiary Beni Saf has announced a target of 45,000t in 2020 of clinker exported to Africa. Algérie Presse Service has reported that the recipient countries include those in the sub-Saharan region.
Nigeria: The Lagos State Commissioner for Health Akin Abayomi has said that an Italian national employed as a consultant by Lafarge Africa was Nigeria’s ‘patient zero’ in the international coronavirus outbreak. No further cases have yet been recorded. Vanguard newspaper has reported that the consultant, who flew in to the country from Milan via Istanbul and attended a meeting in Ewekoro, Ogun State, before staying at a guesthouse there, has been confined to a treatment facility in Yaba, Lagos State. Abayomi praised the astuteness of medical staff in Yaba for isolating the patient overnight after he began to show symptoms after his second day in the country.
Ireland: The Irish Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has won its case against Quinn Cement over the latter’s violation of emissions laws. The Impartial Reporter newspaper has reported that an EPA monitor recorded 36 breaches at Quinn Cement’s Ballyconnell plant between 5 October 2018 and 7 October 2018. The plant was also emitting four times the legal hydrogen chloride on 5 February 2019. Following its subsidiary company’s guilty plea, Quinn Industrial Holdings said via a spokesperson, “Though independent assessment confirmed there were no material environmental impacts arising, best practice environmental safety procedures were followed and production ceased on each occasion. Since then significant work and expenditure has been completed to prevent a recurrence.” The Cavan district court fined Quinn Cement Euro2000.
Boral fined US$9800 for slurry spill 02 March 2020
Australia: The New South Wales Environment Protection Authority (EPA) has issued a US$9800 fine and a clean-up order to Boral for damage caused by a discharge of slurry from its Maclean concrete plant. The Daily Examiner newspaper has reported that a member of the public alerted the body to the spill, which issued from a storm drain into the Clarence River, on 15 October 2019. EPA north regulatory operations director Karen Marler said that the slurry ‘appeared to have been discharging from the Boral plant for some time prior.’ She said, “Subsequent EPA inspections confirm the clean-up and actions taken to improve plant operation were effective.”
CRH shares 2019 results 28 February 2020
Ireland: CRH recorded sales of Euro28.3bn in 2019, up by 6% year-on-year from Euro26.7bn in 2018. Earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) rose by 25% year-on-year to Euro4.20bn from Euro3.36bn. The company said that the results were supported by a positive demand backdrop in the Americas and in key regions in Europe. It also set out a new CO2 emissions roadmap with target of 520kg/t of cement by 2030, a 33% reduction compared to 1990 levels.
Cement shortage leads to 50,000 builders out of work in Hong Kong 28 February 2020
China: Hong Kong construction companies have laid off 50,000 workers and reduced the hours of a further 80,000 because of a shortage of cement, with production still suspended in China due to the coronavirus epidemic. New World Construction co-managing director David Kwok Chun-wai said the company’s supply chain had been disrupted, adding, “It is still too early to predict the impact.”
The Hong Kong Construction Industry Employees General Union chairman Wong Ping said, “Workers can nail boards, however without cement, they cannot proceed to laying floors.”
Belarusian Cement Company opens Polish office 28 February 2020
Poland: Belarusian Cement Company (BCC) says that it has responded to ‘increased demand for Belarusian cement in Central Europe in 2019’ by opening an office in Warsaw, Poland. Belarus Daily News has reported that one purported aim of the office is to court supply contracts with ‘European, Polish, German and other partners.’
Both Krichevtsementnoshifer and Krasnoselskstrojmaterialy, the remaining two of Belarus’s three cement producers, have reportedly concluded preliminary agreements for export of their cement to Poland in 2020.
Toshali Cements acquires land with historic religious landmark 28 February 2020
India: The state government of Odisha has leased an area of limestone-bearing land that includes the Asura Vihara Gumphas, a first century BC Jain religious centre with significance in local mythology. The Blink newspaper reported that the site, consisting of three caves, is ‘covered by thick vegetation’ and in need of ‘proper conservation and preservation.’ Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH) Odisha state curator Anil Tripathy said, ‘the caves should be retrieved from the company and the allotment of the site cancelled.’ Toshali Cements is reportedly carrying out limestone surveys on an area, including the caves.
INTACH is in the process of conducting a comprehensive survey of the Mahandi Valley, in which the land lies, and has identified over 1000 monuments of ‘tangible heritage.’