Displaying items by tag: Taiheiyo
Japan/Singapore: Taiheiyo Cement, which operates a cement terminal in Singapore through Singapore Cement Manufacturing (SCMC), a joint venture with Singapore-based Hong Leong Asia Ltd, has completed a new 24,000t cement silo at SCMC's cement terminal in Singapore.
Infrastructure investment, including subway and highway construction, is driving the robust cement market in Singapore and fuelling demand for low-heat-type cement as a way to prevent thermal cracking in concrete structures with large cross-sections (so-called mass concrete).
Coinciding with the construction of SCMC's new silo, Taiheiyo Cement has developed a new type of cement specifically formulated to satisfy Singapore's local needs. The new export-oriented product, which is manufactured using Portland cement and admixture ingredients such as fly ash from coal-fired power plants, qualifies as type CEM II as defined by Singapore's cement quality standard (SS EN 197-1). The new cement has greater resistance to thermal cracking due to its low-heat and low-shrinkage characteristics, higher long-term strength, improved workability and lower alkali-silica reactivity. It is also certified under the Singapore Green Labelling Scheme (SGLS) and therefore carries a Green Label in recognition of its environmental friendliness, which was demonstrated during a series of tests carried out with the cooperation of local users and experts. SCMC also used the new cement in the construction of its new silo and in the process verified its performance.
Taiheiyo plans to manufacture the product using fly ash that has been selected, formulated and managed with the cooperation of domestic Japanese power companies. It is expected to contribute to the effective use of fly ash from newly-built coal-fired power plants in Japan. Going forward, SCMC plans to use the new silo for CEM II, complementing its Ordinary Portland Cement and expanding its business through the supply of new cement that meets local needs.
eRex to Invest US$164m in biomass power plant at Taiheyo Cement
16 September 2014Japan: eRex Inc, a power generation company, has agreed to invest US$159m in a biomass power project situated in the premises of Taiheyo Cement plant in Oita Prefecture, Japan. The total installed capacity of the power plant will be 50MW, sufficient to supply 100,000 households. The investment/MW will be US$3.18m. The power plant will use palm shells, a by-product of palm oil production in Indonesia and elsewhere, as its primary fuel. The company will set up a separate storage facility in Oita to hold 100,000t of palm shells. The power plant is expected to be operational in 2016.
Taiheiyo Cement ends joint venture with Chinese peer
10 September 2014Japan/China: Japan’s Taiheiyo Cement has dissolved a joint venture agreement with Xinjiang Tianye in Xinjiang, Chinese in response to Chinese government efforts to reduce excess capacity in the sector.
Taiheiyo Cement Investment, the company’s Chinese arm, signed the agreement with Xinjiang Tianye in December 2012. After receiving government approval, they set up a joint venture in April 2013, planning to produce 1.2Mt/yr of cement. However, in 2013 Beijing increased measures to curb investment in the cement industry to counter overcapacity. This cast doubt on whether the venture could build production facilities as planned. With the business environment for the region's cement industry worsening, Taiheiyo and Xinjiang Tianye opted to end the agreement.
US: After five years in the red in its US business, Taiheiyo Cement expects to return the segment to profitability in the year that ends in March 2015, according to company president Shuji Fukuda.
The American subsidiary had been a major source of revenue, raking in just over US$200m in 2006, but began posting losses after the 2008 financial crisis hit. With the US housing market slow to recover, the subsidiary has remained stuck in the red year after year.
However, the segment is doing more business, particularly on the West Coast, while the average selling price rose by 10% in 2013.
Cement producers to boost shipping capacity in Japan
08 January 2014Japan: Cement producers in Japan aim to upgrade their shipping fleets following brisk demand from the reviving construction industry. Three cement producers are expected to spend more than US$95m to acquire new and used vessels in early 2014 according to Nikkei Report. Roughly 70% of cement is moved by sea in Japan.
SumitomoOsaka Cement will spend US$65m, first adding a large ship that can carry 8000t in February 2013 and then purchasing two 2000t ships and one 5500t ship after April 2015. Following the decommissioning of three ships the company will expand its fleet to 20 ships with a combined capacity of 93,000t in 2015 from 19 vessels with a capacity of 82,000t in 2013.
Ube-Mitsubishi Cement plans to start using three new large ships, each with a capacity of roughly 7000 - 12,000t, from February 2014. The company is expected to spend about US$14m on the additions, two of which will be newly built and the other rented.
Taiheiyo Cement will add three large ships for about US$19m in 2014 or later.
Japanese cement producer reduced their shipping fleets following declines in the market in the early 1990s. A reversal of this trend has been attributed to growing construction in large cities, rebuilding after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami and an anticipated rise in demand ahead of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.
China wants Taiheiyo plant closed
21 August 2013China: Taiheiyo Cement Corp. has been ordered by the Chinese city of Nanjing to close a local production facility by the end of 2014 according to The Nikkei. Closing the Nanjing plant would reduce Taiheiyo Cement's Chinese cement output capacity by 30 - 40%.
Nanjing cited air pollution as the reason and issued the same mandate to local cement manufacturers as well. It has not said whether or not there will be any compensation. The Japanese firm has said that it will ask the city to reconsider. If Taiheiyo Cement does not follow the order, the local partner with which it has a joint venture will likely be punished, with those in charge to be dismissed from the company.
Taiheiyo sales rise by 12% to US$1.91bn in Q1 2013
14 August 2013Japan: Taiheiyo's sales revenue rose by 12% year-on-year to US$1.91bn for the first quarter of the 2012 - 2013 Japanese financial year that ended on 30 June 2013. In the quarter ending on 31 March 2012 it was US$1.70bn. The Japanese cement producer attributed the increase to rebuilding following the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami disaster, increased private sector construction investment in urban areas and favourable policies by the Japanese government.
The company returned to a net profit, making US$20.8m from a loss of US$54.8m in the same period as the prior year. For Taiheiyo's cement business sales of cement to external customers rose by 10% to US$1.20bn from US$1.09bn.
Production up in Xinjian but profit down
19 December 2012China: The Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in north west China produced 35.1Mt of cement in the first 10 months of 2012, a year-on-year increase of 24.8%, according to the local statistics bureau.
From 1 January 2012 to 31 October 2012, Xinjiang saw the output value of its cement industry output come to US$1.93bn, a year-on-year increase of 0.9%. However, the industry earned just US$170m in profit, a year-on-year decline of 58.6%.
The region's government says that the region's cement production capacity is likely to exceed 90Mt/yr in 2013.
Meanwhile, Japan's Taiheiyo Cement Corp. has announced that it has agreed with a Chinese chemical maker to set up a 1.2Mt/yr cement plant in Xinjiang. The joint venture, to be known as Xinjiang Tianye Taiheiyo Building Material Company, will start cement production in November 2014.
The new company will be owned 40% by Taiheiyo Cement (China) Investment Corp., a Beijing-based unit of Taiheiyo Cement and 60% by the Chinese partner, Xinjiang Tianye (Group) Co.
Taiheiyo returns to profit in first half
14 November 2012Japan: The major Japanese cement producer Taiheiyo Cement has released its financial results for the first half of the current fiscal year, which began on 1 April 2012. For the six months to 30 September 2012, the company took a revenue of US$4.43bn up from US$4.35bn in the same period of 2011. However, Taiheiyo went from a making a loss of US$42.3m in the six months to 30 September 2011 to a profit of US$6.7m. It did not provide an operating result for the 2011 period.
Looking forwards, the company has forecast revenues of US$9.2bn for the year ending 31 March 2012, with an operating profit of US$500.4m, a pretax profit of US$381.6m and a net profit of US$125.1m.
Taiheiyo aims for big operating gains
19 March 2012Japan: Taiheiyo Cement is aiming for a group operating profit of around US$600m in the 2014 fiscal year, an increase of 90% on its projection for the current fiscal year, which ends on 31 March 2012. The target will be included in an upcoming midterm business plan that runs through to March 2015. The underlying assumptions include total domestic demand rising by 4% to 43Mt/yr. Taiheiyo Cement anticipates a 2Mt/yr boost from earthquake rebuilding.
In its domestic business, the Japanese market leader is likely to seek a 10-20% increase in its profit that will be underpinned by reconstruction demand. The operations are expected to give a profit of more than US$360m for the current fiscal year.
Taiheiyo has reported that cement production at its Ofunato plant in Iwate Prefecture has returned to about 70% of the levels seen before the 11 March 2011 earthquake and tsunami disaster. The company is scrambling to repair the production base with an eye toward returning the facility to full capacity at the end of June 2012. In the autumn the firm will start producing high-tensile cement for use in repairing infrastructure in the disaster-hit Tohoku region.
Taiheyo Cement will also shake up its sluggish US business, which is on track for an operating loss of US$108m in the current fiscal year. On top of personnel reductions, the company will continue to sell land and make other downsizing efforts. An operating profit of US$120m for US operations is targeted by the 2014 fiscal year.