Displaying items by tag: GCW422
Update on Mali
11 September 2019The news from Mali this week is that a new cement grinding plant is in the works. Ciments et Matériaux du Mali plans to build a 0.5Mt/yr plant near Bamako. Work on the US$34m project is set to start in October 2019 although there has been no word on the equipment supplier. The project is a long-standing one from France’s Vicat.
A new plant is probably very welcome following the last six months in the local market. Prices spiked by a third in May 2019, leading local producer Diamond Cement Mali to arrange a press conference to defend itself. Director Ibrahima Dibo explained that the company had fixed its prices in conjunction with the government at its units at Astro and Dio Gare since 2012. Instead, he blamed importers and traders for the situation, as well as low import rates from Senegal and Ivory Coast. The company proposed that it tackle the situation by importing more cement from one of its plants in Takoradi in Ghana and then transporting it into Mali via Dakar in Senegal. Although it noted that it would need permission from the government to do this.
The country has also been targeted by Nigeria’s Dangote Cement for several years. Back in 2016 the Nigerian cement producer was considering building a 1.5Mt/yr grinding plant. It also wanted to build a second production line at its Pout plant near Dakar in Senegal to export clinker specifically to Mali. It has since scaled back its expansion plans as the Nigerian economy entered a recession but in its 2018 annual report it noted that it had exported 0.43Mt of cement from Senegal and that most of this had gone to Mali, with plans to further increase exports in 2019.
At present Mali has three main grinding plants. Two are run by Diamond Cement and the third by Ciments de l'Afrique (CIMAF). An integrated plant at Guinbané, Diéma in the Kayes region was announced in late 2016 when the government signed a memorandum of understanding with Gaia Equity, a private equity company. This project was going to be built by China’s Sinoma.
Figure 1: Distribution of cement prices in Africa and Location of Plants 2015. Source: World Bank / ECDPM.
The status of that last project is unknown since there has been little news on it since. However, Figure 1 above shows why a private equity firm might sense opportunity. It’s out of date as various countries have become self-sufficient and we’ve covered this plenty of times before but the graphic from the World Bank really brings home the message that moving cement overland is uneconomical. This is mirrored by the mounting price of cement in Mali earlier this year. Africa has been described as the last great cement frontier and Mali is on the frontline.
Go Hooi Koon appointed company secretary at Tasek Corporation
11 September 2019Malaysia: Tasek Corporation has appointed Go Hooi Koon as its company secretary. She succeeds Vincent Chow Poh Jin who has resigned. Tasek operates an integrated cement plant at Tasek in Perak.
Cemento Regional starts work on grinding plant in El Salvador
11 September 2019El Salvador: Guatemala’s Cemento Regional has started building a 0.12Mt/yr grinding plant at Acajutla. The subsidiary of Grupo Monterrey has invested US$12m in the project, according to the El Economista newspaper. The plant is scheduled to be commissioned in December 2019. A ceremony marking the start of construction was attended by the president of the Export and Investment Promotion Agency of El Salvador (PROESA), Salvador Gómez Góchez and the president of Cemento Regional, Roberto Díaz Durán.
The new plant is situated near to the port at Acajutla, enabling it to import clinker and other raw materials from Asia. The plant will be built by Qualicons, a Guatemalan construction company. It was previously reported that Spain’s Cemengal would supply a modular mill for the plant.
Premiere Slag plans facility to ‘process and sell cement’ in Mabini
11 September 2019Philippines: Premiere Slag has received an investment of US$1.95m from the Philippines’ AbaCore Capital Holdings for the construction of a cement facility in Mabina, Luzon.
Charah extends fly ash contract at power plants in Ohio
11 September 2019US: Charah Solutions has been awarded an extension to its contract to provide byproduct sales and material handling operations for Luminant’s Miami Fort Power Plant and Zimmer Power Plant in Ohio. Charah Solutions will continue to manage and market coal combustion products produced by these two units. It currently sells and markets grade Class F fly ash from the two power plants via its materials network to concrete product manufacturers and ready mix concrete producers in the Midwest, Northeast and South regions of the country.
In addition, Charah Solutions will continue all other coal combustion residuals material handling and disposal operations at both locations, including landfill management and byproduct loadout, as well as the operations and maintenance of the plant flue gas desulphurisation (FGD) system at Miami Fort.
Ultracem begins cement processing in Guatemala
11 September 2019Guatemala: Colombia’s Ultracem has invested US$1.2m in a facility for packing cement in Puerto Barrios, Guatemala, generating 16 jobs. The company has revealed that its next project in the country, where it currently sells 0.12Mt/yr of cement, will be production facilities. Prensa Libre has reported that Ultracem’s three-step entry into Guatemala, beginning in April 2019 with the import and distribution of packed cement, has entered its second stage. This consists of packing its Colombian cement, imported via Honduras, in Guatemala.
Ultracem hopes to have entered production in the country to compete with Cementos Progreso, whose three plants’ 5.3Mt/yr total output constitutes the entirety of domestic production, by September 2020. Ultracem’s administrative director Estuardo Solís has stated that ‘an aggressive marketing plan for expansion into Guatemala, Central America’s largest market’ is in place. Over four months the company has sold 40,000t of cement in the country, all of it in the east, centre and north-east.
Ultracem began its Central American expansion in 2018 with cement distribution to Panama, followed closely by Honduras, where it established a US$2m grinding plant in May 2019.
Ras Al Khaimah Cement backpedals on plant and quarry acquisition
11 September 2019UAE: Failure of financing has put a stop to Ras Al Khaimah’s intended purchase of an 0.6Mt/yr integrated white cement plant in Fujairah and its associated quarry. Reuters has reported that the estimated US$123m deal will not be going ahead.
Adelaide Brighton Cement employee in court on US$8.52m fraud charges
11 September 2019Australia: Adelaide Brighton’s credit manager from 2009 to 2017 appeared in Adelaide Magistrates Court accused of defrauding the company of US$8.52m over 230 different occasions. ABC news has reported that the defendant stands charged of aggravated deception and dishonestly dealing with documents.
HeidelbergCement to take over Ultratech’s stake in Emirates Cement
10 September 2019Bangladesh: Germany’s HeidelbergCement will purchase Ultratech’s stake in Emirates Cement, the owner of the 0.5Mt/yr Emirates grinding plant in Dhaka. NewAge Business has reported that Ultratech, a subsidiary of India’s Aditya Birla Group, has set the price of the stake at US$32.1m.
Ultratech first produced cement in Bangladesh following Aditya Birla Group’s acquisition of ETA Star Cement in April 2010, when it bought into the latter’s Bangladeshi subsidiary Emirates Cement for an estimated investment of US$382m. The divestment of its sole Bangladeshi asset awaits bank approval.
Bangladesh produces 58Mt/yr of cement, exceeding a market demand of 31Mt/yr. Of the 75 producers in the country, only 35 are actively making cement.
Turkmenistan plant exports cement to Uzbekistan
10 September 2019Turkmenistan: The state-owned 1.0Mt/yr integrated Lebap cement plant has exported 0.2Mt of cement to neighbouring countries in the eight months to the end of August 2019. Uzbekistan received the majority of this. Neitralnii has reported that the plant has produced test batches of cement using basalt instead of its usual iron ore. It has noted increased durability, density and frost resistance, as well as lower costs and financial impact. The substitution of the locally-sourced ferrous rock for imported haematite is part of the central Asian country’s state programme of import substitution.