
Displaying items by tag: GCW316
Metso to split its Minerals Services division
23 August 2017Finland: Metso plans to divide its Minerals Services division into two separate business areas: Minerals Services and Minerals Consumables. The heads of the business areas will report to Metso's president and chief executive officer (CEO) and they will be members of Metso's executive team.
The Minerals Services business area will consist of spare parts and service solutions as well as supporting distribution and repair centre infrastructures. The Minerals Consumables business area will consist of wear part businesses together with the foundries and other manufacturing operations as well as supply chain infrastructure.
The new organisational structure will become effective at the beginning of 2018, and the presidents of the new business areas will be appointed in due course.
Anhui Conch half-year sales fly following price hike
22 August 2017China: Anhui Conch’s sales revenue rose by 33% year-on-year to US$4.79bn in the first half of 2017 from US$3.60bn in the same period in 2016. Its sales volumes of cement and clinker rose by 4.6% to 134Mt. Its gross profit rose by 37% to US$1.48bn from US$1.08bn. The cement producer attributed its result to ‘significant’ increases in prices and continued discipline with production and operation costs.
By region the company reported particular increases in sales in East and Central China due to increased sales volumes and prices. In West China it increased its sales due to increasing market demand and the promotion of off-season production. South China was the company’s weakest region, with an increase of 14.3% in sales revenue, due to new production capacity.
During the reporting period Anhui Conch put seven new cement grinding plants into operation. Its Merek grinding plant in Indonesia has started operation and construction continues at plants Conch North Sulawesi in Indonesia, Battambang Conch Cement in Cambodia and Luangsprabang Conch Cement in Laos. Preliminary work for new plants in Russia, Laos and Myanmar is also in progress.
Thatta Cement grows sales in current financial year
22 August 2017Pakistan: Thatta Cement’s sales revenue rose by 34% to US$36.3m in its financial year that ended on 30 June 2017, from US$27.1m in the same period in 2016. Its profit increased by 8.7% to US$6.8m from US$6.3m.
Nepal: The Investment Board Nepal has delayed signing a Project Investment Agreement (PIA) with China’s Hongshi-Shivam Cement due to ‘technical reasons.’ The joint venture is currently building a US$360m cement plant at Nawalparasi. The deal, which would have protected the interests of the foreign investor, has been deferred while Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba visits India in late August 2017, according to the Kathmandu Post newspaper. Sources quoted by the newspaper attribute the delay to tensions perceived by the Nepalese government regarding infrastructure projects backed by India and China. The agreement is expected to be signed on 3 September 2017.
Brazil: The state government of Mato Grosso has reached an agreement with Votorantim to recover US$79m in tax from Votorantim. The payment refers to an under-payment of tax made in error by the company's cement plants in Corumbá and Nobres in 2015, according to Midia News. The state’s tax recovery unit absolved the cement producer of any blame, instead attributing the error to an interpretive issue.
Philippines: The Philippine Cement Importers Association (PICA) has supported the Department of Trade and Industry’s measures to regulate cement imports. The association has also proposed that imported cement be tested upon entry, according to the Manila Standard newspaper.
“The PCIA is categorically against importation of sub-standard cement. In fact, the PCIA has proposed to take an active part in monitoring and enforcement against sub-standard cement whether imported or locally manufactured,” said PICA’s executive director Dani Enriquez. He added that sub-standard cement would be bad for business and the country’s infrastructure program.
South Africa: PPC estimates that cement demand improved in South Africa during the first half of 2017 following a poor first quarter to the calendar year. It has also predicted that production capacity utilisation rates for the industry as a whole are growing and that they could reach full capacity in 2020. On an adjusted like-for-like basis its cement sales volumes grew by 0.5% year-on-year in the most recent quarter due to good performance in its Coastal and Inland areas. However, imports have continued to decline, by 27%. Outside of South Africa the company has overseen growth particularly in Rwanda, and, in Zimbabwe, the Democratic Republic of Congo and in Ethiopia as well. The company made the announcement as part of an operational update for its first financial quarter that ended on 30 June 2017.
”Our focus is firmly on delivering improved profitability and liquidity in the shorter term while our longer term strategy remains unchanged. More specifically, we will focus our management effort on the new operations in the DRC and Ethiopia, ensuring that they deliver to expectations, while further optimising efficiency in our other businesses,” said interim chief executive officer (CEO) Johan Claassen.
Aunde orders four mills from Loesche
21 August 2017Turkey: Germany’s Aunde has ordered four vertical roller mills from Loesche for a new cement plant being built in Soma. The order includes one 350t/hr raw material mill, one 30t/hr coal or 27t/hr petcoke mill and two 150t/hr clinker or granulated blast furnace slag mills. The scope of delivery also includes additional components such as water injection, cyclones, slide gates and rotary feeders as well as a spare parts package for the next two years.
Ohorongo Cement opens terminal at Ondangwa
21 August 2017Namibia: Ohorongo Cement has opened a US$0.3m terminal at Ondangwa in the north of the country. Clemens H Kashuupulwa, the governor of Oshana Region, officiated at the event. The depot is intended to target the four northern regions in Namibia as well as export cement to southern Angola. The site follows a Private Public Partnership agreement with TransNamib to lease land at Ondangwa railway station, and is part of the Northern Railway Extension project that extends from Tsumeb to Oshikango. It will distribute various cement types, including CEM II 42.5 N, CEM I 42.5 R, CEM II 32.5 N B-LL for the local market. It will also ship CEM II 42.5 N with Portuguese labelling for Angola.
Australia: Adelaide Brighton has announced a 10.9% year-on-year fall in net profit for the six months to June to US$54.4m, while revenues rose by 4.7% to US$569.2m. For the full year it expects underlying net profit to be in the range of US$148 - 157m. The company added that a surging property market and a healthy pipeline of infrastructure projects means that it is on the lookout for acquisitions in a bid to keep pace with demand and grow its market share. The company has already spent US$67.7m on bolt-on acquisitions so far in 2017.
“From a demand point of view on the east coast, it’s hard to be pessimistic,” said chief executive Martin Brydon to The Australian newspaper. Brydon said the company was pragmatic about the residential property market eventually cooling off, but any slowdown would not immediately affect the business. “Even if there was a significant drop in approvals or applications for housing, the pipeline is still there for the next 18 months,” he added.
The company also said it was likely to raise cement prices for a second time later in 2017 amid the robust conditions on the east coast, but declined to confirm the likely amount of the price rise. The price rise has been partly precipitated by strong demand but also by rising electricity prices, which remain a major preoccupation for the company. It is expected to spend an extra US$6.3m on electricity within 2017 than it budgeted for, due to unexpectedly high prices.