Displaying items by tag: Lafarge
Lafarge plans to use fracking waste water for cement production
06 December 2013Canada: Lafarge Canada wants to use fracking waste water from two Hants County holding ponds in its Brookfield cement plant, Colchester County.
The Brookfield plant currently uses 35ML/yr of fresh water from Shortts Lake to control the exhaust temperatures of its rotary cement kiln. The fracking waste water would be injected into the kiln in place of some of the water drawn from Shortts Lake, and would be evaporated and emitted out the stack.
"We're looking to do a trial. We want to do a test to see if this water will work with our manufacturing process," said Lafarge spokesman Regan Watts.
However, the proposal has some Colchester County residents on edge. "I think people are a bit concerned," said Bob Taylor, mayor of the Municipality of the County of Colchester. "They are worried about possible harmful effects from it so they want to know it's safe before it goes ahead."
Environment Minister Randy Delorey said that the waste water is being treated a second time by Atlantic Industrial Services using reverse osmosis prior to any use in the plant. He said that the province will consider different options for the waste water once it receives the final test results, expected in early 2014. "It's safe enough to drink," Watts said. "The contaminants have been removed and the recycled waste water exceeds government guidelines to be released in the environment."
Sichuan Shuangma Cement to buy 25% of Dujiangyan Lafarge
04 December 2013China: Sichuan Shuangma Cement plans to buy a 25% stake in Lafarge Dujiangyan Cement for US$137m. Shuangma Cement will pay for the acquisition by issuing shares to the company's major shareholder, Lafarge China Overseas Holding.
Lafarge makes 31 temporary lay-offs for December 2013
02 December 2013Canada: Lafarge Canada Inc. have temporarily laid off 31 of its 50 unionised workers for December 2013 at its Brookfield cement plant as a seasonal cost-cutting measure.
"These workers will be back on the job early in the new year," said plant manager Scarth MacDonnell, who added that the temporary layoff is consistent with the seasonal nature of the business. "It is an unfortunate reality given the weather-related impact of the construction industry."
The future of the plant is solid as it continues to service Lafarge customers throughout Canada and the US. "Lafarge is firmly committed to its Brookfield plant for the long term and we will make the necessary investments to secure our future in Nova Scotia," said MacDonnell.
The Brookfield Lafarge plant received US$631,000 from the ecoNova Scotia Fund for Clean Air and Climate Change in 2010 to gear up for production of a new variety of low-carbon cement. The environmentally friendly cement is set to be in production at the plant by 2015.
Lafarge opens fourth world research laboratory in Algiers
20 November 2013Algeria: Lafarge inaugurated its fourth laboratory dedicated to research in construction materials in Algiers on 18 November 2013. The Euro1.75m laboratory is the first such facility that the multinational cement producer has opened in Africa.
Luc Callebat, CEO of Lafarge-Algeria, described the laboratory as a "platform technology to coordinate and accelerate innovation to serve the needs of the Algerian construction market," during the inauguration ceremony. The project is intended to meet increasing demand for housing in terms of quality, cost and energy efficiency. The laboratory joins Lafarge's existing network in France, China and India.
Covering an area of 2290m2, the research laboratory includes control laboratories and research in cement, concrete, aggregates and building systems. The laboratory also organises specialised training in the construction industry.
Lafarge Republic orders cement grinding plant from Fives
20 November 2013Philippines: Lafarge Republic signed a contract with Fives FCB for a new cement grinding plant for the Teresa plant located in Rizal province. The proposed plant will add 850,000t/yr production capacity to the Teresa plant's capacity in 2015. No financial information for the contract has been released.
The contract includes raw material feeding, with clinker and pulverised coal fed through the existing circuit and other additives, such as a limestone, gypsum, fly ash, fed by truck dump. A cement grinding workshop will be fitted with one Horomill® 3800 and one TSV™ 4500 classifier, associated with a dryer-aerodecantor and a TGT™ filter (under Fives Solios licence). A Fives Pillard vertical hot gas generator (12 MW) for the pouzzolana (25% moisture) drying will also be fitted.
The plant's cement silo will have a capacity of 5000t. A new cement transport system will connect the new silo, the site's existing silos and the packing plant. The contract also includes the control and supervision system and an electrical sub-station for the new build.
Lafarge overhaul of Albany cement plant
19 November 2013US: Renovation of Lafarge's 50-year-old cement plant in Ravena, New York will be completed by mid-2016, preserving 112 jobs at the plant.
This is the first fixed timeline for the project since it was proposed in 2008. Delays have been blamed on the poor state of the economy. Lafarge also needed to obtain state and federal environmental permits, a process that involves rounds of reports and public hearings.
Construction is expected to cost several hundred million US$. A specific price tag has not been disclosed.
Company officials say that renovation was necessary in the face of stricter pollution controls from the federal government. Either they would shut down and abandon the location, or gut it and build a massive new kiln to meet the stronger standards. Pollution is a particularly sensitive issue as the cement plant and its quarry sandwich the middle school and high school for the Ravena-Coeymans-Selkirk district.
Third quarter cement producers roundup
13 November 2013The third quarter results are in and signs of a recovery in the construction industry are present. Generally for the European producers, volumes of cement sold in the third quarter of 2013 have improved year-on-year compared to the figures for the first nine months of 2013. Although many of these third quarter sales changes are still negative it seems like the industry has turned a corner.
Lafarge reported that cement sales fell by 4% year-on-year to 102Mt for the first nine months in 2013. In the third quarter of 2013 sales remained stable year–on-year at 36.7Mt. Holcim saw its nine month sales fall by 3% to 104Mt while its third quarter sales remained stable at 36Mt. HeidelbergCement saw its nine month sales rise by 1% to 67.7Mt while its third quarter sales rose by 4% to 25.3Mt. Italcementi saw its nine month sales fall by 6% to 32.6Mt while its third quarter sales fell by 2% to 10.8Mt.
By region some of the differences between the European-based multinational cement producers have been telling. Lafarge, for example, is still down year-on-year on cement volumes sold in North America, denting the perceived wisdom of a strong North American recovery. However, profit indicators such as earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) have risen in that region, increasingly in the third quarter. Cemex and Holcim have done better in this region.
Notably, the unstable political situation in Egypt has also impacted the balance sheets for Lafarge and Italcementi. Lafarge reported that cement sales volumes fell by 27% for the first nine months of 2013, principally due to gas shortages, and 19% for the third quarter as the company started to substitute other fuels. Similarly, Italcementi saw overall cement and clinker sales drop by 11.2% in the nine months and 14% in the third quarter.
Meanwhile in China, Anhui Conch produced 86.2Mt for the nine months, a year-on-year increase of 12.1%. Overall revenues in China seem to have risen after decreases in 2012. Anhui Conch reported that its operating revenue rose by 15% to US$6.08bn for the first nine months and US$2.20bn for the third quarter of 2013. Analysts have pinned the return to profit to building in the country's eastern and southern provinces and the effects of government-led industry consolidation. Bucking this trend though, China National Building Materials (CNBM) saw its revenue rise by 37% to US$13.5bn for the first nine months of 2013 but its profit fell by 8.1% to US$542m.
Anhui Conch, Lafarge, Holcim, CNBM, Italcementi and HeidelbergCement all feature at the top of Global Cement's list of the 'Top 75 global cement companies' to be published in the December 2013 issue of Global Cement Magazine. Ahead of final publication we want to know whether readers agree with the rankings. Download our list (registration required) and let us know your comments by 1 December 2013.
Lafarge Pakistan Cement intends to invest in Tajikistan
12 November 2013Tajikistan: A Lafarge Pakistan (LP) delegation, led by CEO Amr Ali Redahas, met with the Ministry of Energy and Industry (MoEI) to discuss trade and economic cooperation. They agreed that the cement production issue would be tabled to the agendas of the commission's sessions. While in Tajikistan, the LP representatives intended to meet with senior representatives of Tajikistan's largest cement producers Tojikcement (Dushanbe cement plant) and Huaxin Gayur Cement.
A 1Mt/yr Greenfield cement plant, built by Huaxin Gayur Cement in Yovon, Tajikistan, started operation in August 2012. Cement demand in Tajikistan is currently well ahead of production levels and imports continue to play an important role. However, the Tajikstan government has attracted foreign investment to expand its cement production base.
New Lafarge Tarmac HQ inauguration
08 November 2013UK: Lafarge Tarmac has marked the official launch of its new headquarters, Portland House in Solihull, by welcoming Caroline Spelman, MP for Meriden, to the facility.
More than 100 employees joined Spelman for a celebratory lunch at Portland House before being briefed on the company's plans and its contribution to the region's economy, as well as its importance to UK construction, by Lafarge Tarmac's chief executive officer, Cyrille Ragoucy.
"This is a big day for us and we were delighted to welcome Caroline to Portland House to mark this special occasion. It was good to meet her and provide her with an overview of our business. She was extremely interested to meet our colleagues and hear about the important contribution that we are making to the regional and national economies and the role that our innovative products are making to the future of UK construction," said Ragoucy.
Spelman said she felt privileged to have been invited to inaugurate the building and visit such an exceptional site. "It's great to see that a business based in the heart of the UK with fantastic transport links is developing products which are making a positive contribution to the sustainability of the built environment,' she said.
Portland House, the company's new low-energy headquarters near Birmingham International Airport, has undergone a major internal refurbishment to allow the offices to accommodate up to 500 Lafarge Tarmac employees. The state-of-the-art sustainable building, which was originally constructed in 2007 using the company's materials, reduces the need for heating and cooling thanks to its innovative concrete design.
Lafarge sits on carbon permits so far in 2013 due to weak prices
07 November 2013France: Lafarge has stockpiled carbon permits in the European Union for the first nine months of 2013 due to weak prices. The multinational cement producer confirmed the situation to Reuters following the release of its third quarter results on 6 November 2013.
"Given the current price for CO2 rights there is not a strong rationale for sale compared to holding them for the future," said a Lafarge spokeswoman. Lafarge made Euro56m from selling carbon permits in the first nine months of 2012. Holcim reported in its third quarter results for 2013 that its revenue from the sale of CO2 emission certificates in the first nine months of 2013 fell by 17% year-on-year to Euro8.10m from Euro9.7m.
The EU Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) has seen the price of carbon permits fall by over 80% to Euro4/t in August 2013 from Euro30/t in 2008. The scheme has been undermined by an oversupply of permits.