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Cimencam to ramp up grinding capacity in 2018
05 May 2016Cameroon: Les Cimenteries du Cameroun (Cimencam), a subsidiary of the multinational LafargeHolcim, has announced that it has signed an investment agreement with the government for the construction of a new cement grinding unit in Nomayas.
The new US$40.3m installation is scheduled to start operation in 2018, initially with a capacity of 0.5Mt/yr. It will have the option to increase production to 1Mt/yr. The plant will use imported clinker from the port of Kribi.
India: Cement maker Burnpur Cement plans to invest US$75m to increase the company’s grinding capacity from 0.6Mt/yr to 3Mt/yr, according to the company's vice chairman and managing director Ashok Gutgutia. He said that the investment would be spent over the next three to four years.
Burnpur Cement is a small Indian cement producer that operates two plants, one in Asansol (West Bengal) and one in Patratu (Jharkhand). Each plant operates at a capacity of 0.3Mt/yr.
How the investment will be split between the plants is unclear, but the announcement comes as the company is building a third 2Mt/yr plant in West Bengal, which was announced previously. When the three projects are complete Burnpur will have increased its capacity by nearly 10-fold, from 0.6Mt/yr to 5Mtyr.
Pakistan: Cement sales are up in Pakistan, with All Pakistan Cement Manufacturers Association Chairman Muhammad Ali Tabba claiming that the sector is using 95% of its installed capacity. He said that strong export growth in March 2016 was ‘very encouraging’ and had been major factor behind the increased sales. Tabba highlighted new capacity being brought on by DG Khan, Lucky Cement, Cherat Cement and Attock Cement as indicative of the sector’s confidence in the Pakistani economy
Despite this, the sector remains accused of forming a cartel to keep cement prices high. Tabba rebuffed the claims, saying, “The industry is neither managing despatches nor the prices and is operating on the principles of free market economy.”
Philippines: Holcim Philippines’ profit was flat year-on-year in the first quarter of 2016 at US$31.7m, despite revenues increasing by 17% to US$213.6m. The company reported, however, that production costs rose by 23%, eating into revenues.
Holcim Philippines president and country chief executive Eduardo Sahagun said that the company’s first-quarter performance was due to its ability to make supply available in the market on time and its strong regional presence.
“Moving forward, we are cautiously optimistic as we await the results of the coming elections. Hopefully, the focus on infrastructure remains, as this is much needed by the country to sustain its development,” Sahagun said.
Cement demand in the Philippines grew 12% in the first quarter of 2016, on sustained rollout of private sector projects and higher state spending for infrastructure.