
Displaying items by tag: Oil well
Gulf Cement receives oil well cement certification
17 February 2017UAE: Gulf Cement has received certification from the American Petroleum Institute to produce oil well cement. Its sales revenue fell by 8% year-on-year to US$153m in 2016 from US$167m in 2015 and its profit fell by 30% to US$13.6m from US$19.4m, according to Mubasher. The cement producer operates a plant in Ras Al Khaimah.
Algeria: Groupe Industriel des Ciments d'Algérie (GICA), the government-owned cement producer, has launched the certification process of its oil well cement ahead of plans to produce the product itself. A sample batch of 300t was produced in November 2016, according to the Algeria Press Service. Rabah Guessoum, the chief executive officer of GICA, said that the cement will produced at the company’s Setif plant and sold to Sonatrach group and foreign oil companies. A national demand of around 300,000t/yr is anticipated.
Cementos Argos to close San Gil plant
17 August 2016Colombia: Cementos Argos plans to close its oil well cement production plant at San Gil in Santander. The closure follows falling demand for this type of cement caused by falling global oil prices. The National Construction Material Industry Workers' trade union Sutimac has requested that the cement producer transfer its 75 employees at the San Gil plant to other parts of the business, according to the El Colombiano newspaper. The union hopes that Cementos Argos will repeat its recent transfer of workers from the now-closed Sabanagrande, Atlantico factory to its plants in Cartagena, Tolu and Antioquia.
Azerbaijan: Azerbaijan's Trend News Agency has reported that the largest cement plant in South Caucasus, Norm Sement, plans to start oil well cement production in 2016, according to Norm Sement CEO Hasan Yalcinkaya. He said that oil well cement is a very sought-after product in Azerbaijan and that by starting its production, cement imports to Azerbaijan will decrease.
"Today, the import of cement products to Azerbaijan is gradually decreasing and the share of imported cement is only 5% of the total market volume, while the share of clinker is 10%," said Yalcinkaya. Norm Sement is also preparing to export its products to the Caspian Sea countries. "Currently, we are considering the opportunities for exporting our products to Russia's south regions, as well as to Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan."
Norm Sement's plant is located in the Garadagh district of Baku. It has a clinker production capacity of 5000t/day and a cement production capacity of 2Mt/yr. In 2014, the plant produced 540,000t of cement and 471,000t of clinker. Azerbaijan's domestic cement demand was 4.4Mt in 2014.
Norm Sement reaches its designed capacity
27 January 2015Azerbaijan: The largest cement plant in the South Caucasus, Norm Sement, situated in Garadagh District of Baku City, has reached its design capacity, according to Norm Sement's CEO Hasan Yalcinkaya. The plant has 5000t/day of clinker production capacity and 2Mt/yr of cement production capacity. Yalcinkaya said that 2014 was successful for the company and Azerbaijan's cement industry as a whole.
"We managed to successfully complete our projects," said Yalcinkaya. "The cement plant was inaugurated by the president of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev on 21 July 2014. "Since that time, the plant has been working very efficiently and has started to produce its own clinker. We have reached our design capacity. So, I can say that 2014 has been successful. 510,000t of cement was produced, while clinker production was at the level of 471,000t in 2014. We were able to cover about 20% of the market for just six months since the beginning of clinker production. We plan to increase our market share with the production of high-quality cement and rendering high-quality services to our clients in the consumer market."
Yalcinkaya further noted that, in 2014, Azerbaijan's domestic demand for cement stood at around 4.3Mt and in 2015 year demand will be at least on the same level. "Currently, about 60% of the market is provided by local producers," said Yalcinkaya. "About 40% of cement is imported from neighbouring countries." He said that the local production plants are fully capable of meeting the market requirements. "Our goal is to reduce cement imports as much as possible," said the CEO.
"To date, we have invested US$326m in the new plant," said Yalcinkaya. "We have several projects on efficiency and production improvements, in particular the expansion of the product range. We will continue to improve our efficiency and reduce energy consumption. We also plan to invest in the production of cement for oil wells."
According to Yalcinkaya, oil well cement production will be developed in 2015. "This is exactly the product that we can easily export to oil producing countries, for instance, to Kazakhstan and Russia," said Yalcinkaya. "Once we develop this product, we will start to export it."
Trinidad Cement enters Colombian market
26 June 2014Colombia / Trinidad & Tobago: Trinidad & Tobago's Trinidad Cement Limited (TCL) has entered the Colombian cement market. The company has imported the first shipment containing cement to be processed at its Barrancabermeja facility in Santander. The shipment contains 300t of Type G oil well cement.
In total, TCL has spent US$320,000 on its facility in Barrancabermeja, and it plans a similar project in Llanos Orientales for the second half of 2014.
Trinidad Cement preparing to expand oil well cement market
05 February 2014Trinidad: Trinidad Cement (TCL) is planning to increase its share of the oil well cement market, according to its chairman Satnarine Bachew. The Caribbean cement producer has been producing well specification cement for over 15 years for the local market but it has now decided to sell the product more widely.
Bachew said that Halliburton has been TCL's main customer, testing the product to a depth of 5000m. TCL intends to follow current demand and build its presence in Central America.
Cemex to expand Odessa on back of oil boom
31 May 2013US: The Mexican multinational cement producer Cemex has announced that it plans to expand the production capacity at its Odessa, Texas cement plant by 0.345Mt/yr to nearly 0.9Mt/yr. The company will expand the plant in order to keep pace with rapidly growing demand in its West Texas market, which is led mainly by the oil and gas industry. By using existing assets and producing value-added products, the company expects to achieve strong returns on its investment.
"This expansion reinforces our longstanding history of serving West Texas and the oil and gas industry by providing superior products coupled with superior customer service," said Karl Watson, Jr, President of Cemex USA. "We look forward to remaining a top cement provider to the oil and gas industry as well as supporting the region's growth in infrastructure and residential construction."
The demand for specialty cement products used in well construction is growing as a result of the use of more efficient extraction technologies, such as horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing. Oil wells using this technology typically reach depths of thousands of meters. Specialty well cement is required for the complex application and extreme conditions to which the wells are exposed. The expansion will use state-of-the-art production technology to achieve higher fuel efficiency and improved productivity. The expansion will also include an improved higher capacity load out system, allowing for a more efficient truck loading process to accommodate the region's growing demand for cement.