Displaying items by tag: Sri Lanka
Fernando appointed as executive director on Tokyo Cement board
12 November 2014Sri Lanka: W Christopher Fernando has been appointed as an executive director to the board of Tokyo Cement Company (Lanka) with effect from 30 October 2014.
Fernando was appointed as Group General Manager of the company in 1991. He is also a director of Fuji Cement Company (Lanka), Tokyo Super Cement Company (Lanka), Tokyo Cement Colombo Terminal, Tokyo Cement Power (Lanka) and Tokyo Eastern Cement Company. He holds degrees in economics, is a Fellow Member of the Institute of Chartered Management Accountants (FCMA), Fellow Member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants (FCA) and an attorney-at-law.
Maha Cement plans Sri Lanka market entry
22 July 2014India: Maha Cement has announced that it plans to enter the Sri Lanka cement market with its joint venture company, My Home Industries Limited (MHIL), which is part-owned by Ireland's CRH. MHIL has 8.40Mt/yr of cement production capacity and plans to increase its capacity to 10Mt/yr by 2015. It plans to set up a cement plant in the east coast of Tamil Nadu, India, for import to nearby Sri Lanka.
Sri Lanka: Holcim Lanka is spending US$22m towards upgrading its cement grinding plant in Ruhunu, Galle. The investment will increase the plant's cement grinding capacity from 0.6Mt/yr to 1Mt/yr. The upgrade will also increase capacity on a Geocycle waste shredding line, building up the clinker warehouse and process efficiency improvement to a sludge drying facility.
"We also intend to make considerable improvements to our distribution by enhancing our logistics," said Holcim Group CEO Bernard Fontana during his first visit to Sri Lanka. Holcim will be concentrating on increasing their production from both their facilities in Puttalam and Ruhunu in the future.
"In our 18 years of existence in Sri Lanka, we have tripled our cement manufacturing capacity to reach 2.3Mt/yr," said Philippe Richart, CEO, Holcim Lanka. Holcim Lanka sold approximately 1.5Mt of cement in 2013 and generated annual revenues of US$154m in 2013.
Sri Lanka: Nearly 500 contract workers at two Holcim Lanka cement plants in the towns of Puttalam and Galle in Sri Lanka have been on strike since 19 May 2014 demanding job permanency, better wages and improved working conditions. The striking workers and their families are occupying the cement plant premises. The Inter Company Employees Union (ICEU) called the strike.
The protesters at the Puttalam plant have blocked the main gate, halting the transport of cement. The company and contractors are trying to break the picket with the help of Sri Lanka's president Mahinda Rajapaksa. The government is determined to end the strike and has deployed police and the riot squad. The police are threatening to arrest union leaders and activists.
On 1 June 2014 the striking contract workers and their families at the Puttalam and Galle plants were attacked by hired thugs with swords and clubs, allegedly organised by the local ruling party politicians. At the Puttalam plant nine people, including an eight year old girl, were injured and sent to hospital. Four are still hospitalised. Protestors asked for police protection, who were present during the attack, but their appeals were allegedly refused. At the Galle plant one protester was injured.
The mother of the eight year old girl who was injured said that her daughter had been thrown to the ground by the thugs. "I'm afraid for my husband, who has been working for eight years as a contract worker. That's why we joined the protest."
Holcim established its Sri Lankan operations after the privatisation of the state-owned Puttalam Cement Corporation in 1996 under former president Chandrika Kumaratunga. After Holcim took over, the workforce was cut from 1500 to less than 900, with only 370 permanent workers. Some of the contract workers have worked for the company for more than 20 years. Keeping workers on contract basis is a means employed to deny the rights they would have as permanent employees and to subject them to harsher working conditions.
Workers in the production and transport sections are employed on a 12 hour shift system. Their basic monthly wage is less than US$115. In the loading section, six workers have to load 4500 cement bags during a 12 hour shift with the assistance of a conveyor belt. The workers on 'general duties' work nine hour shifts and are on daily wages of US$16.02.
Holcim Lanka dominates has more than 40% of the local market. In the recent period, it has increased the price of a 50kg bag of cement several times and profits have soared, even after paying the government's increased taxes.
Sri Lanka: Work on a Thatta Cement project in Sri Lanka has ended because the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) has not yet executed the Land Lease Agreement (LLA). Basic engineering for the cement grinding, storing and bagging plant has been completed but the project has been suspended pending legal issues.
Thatta Cement secretary Taha Hamdani has complained to capital market regulators about the SLPA also signing an agreement with another company whose operational area lies close to its cement project. It appears to obstruct setting up of the cement project within the layout originally planned by the SLPA. The company officials say further progress on the project would recommence 'as soon as LLA is signed with SLPA'.
Thatta Cement suspends project in Sri Lanka
18 March 2014Sri Lanka: Work on Thatta Cement's cement grinding, storing and bagging plant in Sri Lanka has come to a screeching halt.
The company informed investors on 14 March 2014 that the project was 'temporarily suspended' as the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) had not executed the Land Lease Agreement (LLA), despite the fact that basic engineering of the project had been completed by Thatta Cement Company (Pvt) Ltd, a subsidiary of Thatta Cement Company.
The CFO and company secretary of Thatta Cement, Muhammad Taha Hamdani, complained that the SLPA had also signed an agreement with another business venture of car trans-shipment in close vicinity to the proposed cement project, "Without anticipating the expected operational conflict, which now appears to hinder setting up the proposed cement project within the layout originally planned by the SLPA."
The company official stated that further progress on the project would recommence as soon as the LLA is signed with the SLPA.
Holcim Lanka launches new village
29 January 2014Sri Lanka: Holcim Lanka has launched its fourth 'Holcim Village' in Akmeemana, Galle, in the south of the island nation. Holcim said that by laying the foundation for this new Holcim Village, it demonstrates its commitment towards its 'triple bottom line' of economic return, social responsibility and environmental protection. The village at Akmeemana follows three previous projects carried out in Medirigiriya, Eluwankulama and Puttalam.
The Holcim Village in Galle specifically addresses the needs of the community surrounding Ruhunu cement works. The US$900,000 project will house 13 homeless families in fully fledged housing units with electricity, water and access roads, upon completion.
Holcim Lanka appoints new chairman and director
15 January 2014Sri Lanka: Holcim Lanka has appointed Nirmala GihanWickremeratne as chairman and Premila Perera as director.
Wickremeratne has a long and distinguished career at one of Sri Lanka's most respected conglomerates, the Hayleys Group, where he served as managing director / CEO of Dipped Products Group and later as chairman and chief executive of the Hayleys Group. He is credited with the establishment of Dipped Products plc and its evolution into a world leader in its field. Wickremeratne was the founder chairman of the Sri Lanka Association of Manufacturers and Exporters of Rubber Products (SLAMERP) and has been a committee member of the Ceylon Chamber of Commerce, the Chamber's representative on the National Labour Advisory Council and president of the Sri Lanka-France Business Council. Following his retirement, he served as an independent non- executive director of a premier private sector bank.
Premila Perera, formerly partner and head of tax at KPMG in Sri Lanka, is a fellow of the institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka. She has served as regional tax director of KPMG Asia Pacific in Singapore, a member of KPMG International's 'Firm of the Future' Task Force and on the faculty of the Tax Business School of KPMG International.
Sri Lanka's Tokyo Cement sees 660% increase in profit
22 August 2013Sri Lanka: Tokyo Cement's profit rose by 660% to US$4.6m in the quarter ending 30 June 2013 compared to the same period of 2012. The company said that this was due to lower raw material costs.
Tokyo Cement said that its revenue rose by 4% to US$50.8m and that direct costs fell by 5% to US$47.1m. This allowed its gross profit to increase by 87% to US$9.5m. Unspecified other income also rose by 87% to US$1.2m.
Tokyo Cement, which imports clinker for grinding, was hit badly in 2012 as its raw material costs rose and the government, which controls cement prices on the island, delayed a price increase. Now, with higher sales prices and an easing of international commodity and energy prices, clinker prices have fallen. The Sri Lankan Rupee was also more stable in the June 2013 quarter than in the 2012 quarter.
Sri Lankan plant to be restarted
29 July 2013Sri Lanka: The State Resources and Enterprise Development Ministry of Sri Lanka will re-establish a currently closed cement plant in Kankesanthurai, Northern Province, in the extreme north of the country. The plant will be restarted by Sri Lanka Cement. The ministry estimates that, with an investment of US$11.4m, the plant can become operational again within 12 months.
Project proposals to re-establish the factory were presented to State Resources and Enterprise Development Minister Dayasritha Tissera by Sri Lanka Cement Corporation Chairman N S M Samsudeen on 26 July 2013.
According to the project proposal, funds will be sought from the Bank of Ceylon and a copy of the project proposal was also presented to the Bank of Ceylon by Samsudeen. The project aims to produce a minimum of 12,000 x 50kg cement bags per day, which is 600t/day, or 0.2Mt/yr.
Sri Lanka Cement said that it could cover the project cost if it is selected as the main cement supplier for the Northern Highway project initiated by the government. "The project can save US$13m/yr in foreign exchange spent to import cement to the country and it will also generate 300 direct employment and 400 indirect employment opportunities for people in Kankesanthurai," said Samsudeen. Sri Lanka is in the process of building a series of new highways and toll-roads.
The announcement regarding Sri Lankan Cement comes shortly after a series of announcements regarding capacity expansion in Sri Lanka despite a decrease in demand for cement in the first half of 2013. Tokyo Cement plans a 1M/yr plant and Pakistan's D. G. Khan Cement and Thatta Cement have both announced plans for grinding capacity on the island.