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17 July 2025

Caribbean Cement to raise output by 150,000t in 2026

Jamaica: Caribbean Cement Company expects to increase output by 0.15Mt in 2026, according to the Jamaican Gleaner newspaper. Managing director Jorge Martinez said that only one month into the US$42m upgrade at the company’s Rockfort plant in Kingston, daily clinker production had already exceeded expectations. The upgrade targeted a rise in production capacity from 1Mt/yr to 1.3Mt/yr. The company also plans to export 28,000t of cement to Caribbean markets from August 2025, subject to demand. Martinez said the company sees no need to import cement currently.

Production fell in 2024 due to a two-month kiln shutdown for installation works, with domestic sales dropping to 0.95Mt from 1Mt.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • Jamaica
  • Caribbean Cement
  • Output
  • Upgrade
  • Expansion
  • Capacity
  • Clinker
  • Production
  • Export
  • Americas
  • GCW719
17 July 2025

Raysut Cement reports financial results for the first half of 2025

Oman: Raysut Cement reported a consolidated net loss of US$7.5m for the first half of 2025, up from US$3.9m year-on-year, despite a 31% rise in group revenue to US$108m in the six months to 30 June 2025. The increase was reportedly driven by improved sales in domestic and export markets, including Yemen, the Maldives and East Africa.

A new board, appointed in March 2025, has launched a five-point restructuring plan to restore profitability by 2026, addressing debt, streamlining operations and improving efficiency. The company continues to face regional overcapacity, currency risks and competition from Asian producers.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • Oman
  • Raysut Cement
  • Results
  • Middle East and Africa
  • GCW719
17 July 2025

Boral’s Berrima Cement Works reaches alternative fuel milestone

Australia: Boral’s Berrima Cement Works celebrated a milestone of using more than 100,000t of alternative fuels in cement manufacturing at its facility during the 2025 financial year, according to a post by the producer on Linkedin. The facility displaced over 80,000t of coal. The fuels included high-biomass waste and tyres, which were diverted from landfill.

Boral said that it has achieved over 30% thermal energy substitution in the plant’s kiln, with successful trials reaching 45%. With recent upgrades such as the chlorine bypass and further infrastructure investment, the company targets 60% substitution in coming years.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • Boral
  • Australia
  • Alternative Fuels
  • Biomass
  • Tyres
  • Asia
  • GCW719
16 July 2025

Will Mexico be the new powerhouse for Holcim?

Written by David Perilli, Global Cement

Holcim Mexico has been promoting itself as the lynchpin of the group’s growth in Latin America this week. The move makes sense following the spin-off of Holcim’s North America business in late June 2025. The company says that Mexico has a housing deficit, has the highest profitability margin in Latin America and it is leading the transformation toward circular and low-carbon construction.

The bullseye on Latin America was first planted by Holcim in the group’s NextGen Growth 2030 strategy that was released in March 2025. With the company preparing to separate off its most profitable section in the US, it decided to highlight new reasons for investors to stay interested. The summary was ‘focused investment’ in attractive markets in Latin America, Europe, North Africa and Australia, sustainability-driven growth with demolition materials singled out and an emphasis on the building solutions division. Although the Latin America division supplied the smallest geographical share of new group net sales in 2024 (US$3.9bn, 19%), the profitability metric presented, recurring earnings before interest and taxation (EBIT) margin, gave the region the highest result. Or in other words, Holcim is telling investors that it may have divested North America but it still has business south of the Rio Grande… and it looks promising. It then said that it has the ‘best’ geographical coverage and vertical integration in the region and the largest construction materials retail franchise in the form of Disensa.

Understandably, the likes of Cemex, Cementos Argos, Votorantim and others might take exception to some of this. For example, Cemex reported net sales in excess of US$6bn in Latin America and the Caribbean, and Votorantim reported net sales of around US$4.8bn in 2024. Yet, Holcim’s claim of regional spread does carry some weight. It purchased Comacsa and Mixercon in Peru and assets from Cemex in Guatemala in 2024. At the end of the year the group owned integrated cement plants in Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico and Peru. Plus it held grinding plants in the French Antilles and Nicaragua. All of these are majority-owned subsidiaries, often also with aggregate, ready-mixed concrete and building systems businesses. Holcim may have sold up in Brazil in 2022 but it still holds a relatively intact network in Latin America.

Graph 1: Grey cement production in Mexico, 2020 - April 2025, rolling 12 months. Source: Source: National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI). 

Graph 1: Grey cement production in Mexico, 2020 - April 2025, rolling 12 months. Source: National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI).

As for the market, Holcim reported modest but growing net sales in Latin America in 2024, despite lower sales volumes plus elections in Mexico, economic issues in Argentina and political instability in Ecuador. Focusing on Mexico, local cement volumes were said to be stable, aided by a recovery in bagged cement in spite of bulk sales falling on the back of fewer infrastructure projects. Holcim Mexico also spent US$55m on building a new grinding unit at its integrated Macuspana plant in Tabasco. Once complete, the update will increase the site’s capacity by 0.5Mt/yr to 1.5Mt/yr.

Cemex, the market leader in Mexico, released more direct information. It saw its sales and operating earnings fall in 2024. This was blamed on a poor second half to the year following the presidential election in June 2024. GCC’s sales fell more sharply in 2024 and this was blamed on “energy infrastructure limitations and permitting delays in Juarez.” So far in 2025, in the first quarter, the pain in Mexico for the construction sector has continued, with both Cemex and GCC noting strong falls in cement volumes and sales due to a slowdown in industrial demand. Holcim has not reported on Mexico directly so far in 2025 only saying that sales have risen in local currencies in Latin America as a whole in the first quarter. Cemex started a cost cutting exercise in February 2025 in response to the situation. Graph 1 above shows Mexican cement production. Although it should be noted that Cemex and GCC still run subsidiaries in the US. Holcim now does not. Rolling 12-month cement production figures in Mexico started falling in September 2024 and continued to do so until April 2025, the date of the latest data provided by the National Institute of Statistics and Geography.

Despite falling volumes though, the price of cement in Mexico remains high by international standards. At the start of July 2025 the National Association of Independent Businessmen (ANEI) raised the alarm that distributors had warned of an 8% price rise on the way. It’s in this environment that news stories such as Bolivia-based Empresa Pública de Cementos Bolivia (ECEBOL), a producer in a landlocked and mountainous country, preparing to export clinker to Mexico from July 2025 start to sound credible. Sales may have been down in Mexico in 2024 but earnings and margins remain high. In the medium-to-longer term the country looks even more promising, with plenty of scope for development and building products. Ditto the rest of Latin America.

One way a multinational heavy building materials company with a presence in sustainability-obsessed Europe might gain an advantage in the region is by using its knowledge to capture the easier decarbonisation routes first. This is exactly the route Holcim and Holcim Mexico seem to be taking by promoting lower carbon cement and concrete products, and by growing the recycling of demolition materials. Another option, of course, is that Holcim is bolstering its Latin America division ahead of a potential divestment. Either way, Holcim is presenting a plan for growth in its new form, shorn of North America. It’s all to play for.

Published in Analysis
Tagged under
  • Mexico
  • Holcim Mexico
  • Holcim
  • US
  • Cemex
  • Cementos Argos
  • Votorantim Cimentos
  • Peru
  • Guatemala
  • Argentina
  • Colombia
  • Costa Rica
  • Ecuador
  • El Salvador
  • French Antilles
  • Nicaragua
  • Brazil
  • GCW718
  • National Institute of Statistics and Geography
  • Plant
  • grinding plant
  • Bolivia
16 July 2025

Mohammad Amirul Haque elected as president of Bangladesh Cement Manufacturers Association

Written by Global Cement staff

Bangladesh: The Bangladesh Cement Manufacturers Association (BCMA) has elected Mohammad Amirul Haque as its president for the 2025 - 2027 term. He will succeed Alamgir Kabir in the post, according to the Daily Observer newspaper.

Haque is the managing director of Premier Cement Mills. He holds over four decades of management experience in sectors including cement, liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), petrochemicals, shipping, agro-processing, edible oil refining and real estate. He is the founder and managing director of Seacom Group, and currently works as the president of the LPG Operators Association of Bangladesh (LOAB). Haque has also held directorial roles at both the Chittagong Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FBCCI). He is an alumni of the University of Chittagong.

Published in People
Tagged under
  • Bangladesh
  • Bangladesh Cement Manufacturers Association
  • Premier Cement Mills
  • GCW718
16 July 2025

Mário Lopes appointed as director of Cimpor’s Alhandra cement plant

Written by Global Cement staff

Portugal: Cimpor has appointed Mário Lopes as the director of its Alhandra cement plant.

Lopes started working for Cimpor in 1991 as a technician in the manufacturing and packaging department at the Alhandra plant. During his 25 tenure at the company, he has held various jobs including running the Loulé and Alhandra cement plants and managing the group’s industrial leadership in China. He has also worked for the group in Brazil, Egypt and Morocco.

Published in People
Tagged under
  • Portugal
  • Cimpor
  • GCW718
  • Plant
  • China
16 July 2025

Pieter Dekkers appointed as chief financial officer at Aumund Holding

Written by Global Cement staff

Netherlands: Aumund Holding has appointed Pieter Dekkers as its chief financial officer (CFO). He has been working as interim CFO since February 2025.

Dekkers worked in CFO positions from 1997 to 2024 at companies including TIBO EnergyHub software, AM-Flow and De Meeuw. He also set up his own consultancy firm ValueIQ in 2014. Earlier in his career Dekkers worked for DAF Trucks. He holds a graduate degree in industrial engineering and management from the Technical University Eindhoven and a postgraduate qualification as a Registered Controller from the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.

Published in People
Tagged under
  • Netherlands
  • Aumund
  • Germany
  • GCW718
16 July 2025

Seabound launches carbon capture on cement carrier with Heidelberg Materials

UK/Norway: UK-based marine carbon capture firm Seabound has launched an onboard carbon capture project in partnership with Hartmann Group, InterMaritime Group and Heidelberg Materials Northern Europe. The solution equips the UBC Cork, a 5700 gross tonne cement carrier, with Seabound’s calcium looping carbon capture system. This system captures up to 95% of CO₂ and 98% of sulphur emissions from the ship’s exhaust using calcium hydroxide to absorb the CO₂ and convert it into limestone that is stored onboard until returning to port. The captured carbon will be offloaded at the Port of Brevik for use at Heidelberg Materials’ Brevik cement plant, host of the first industrial-scale carbon capture facility in the cement sector.

The project is co-funded by the Eurostars partnership on Innovative SMEs, part of Horizon Europe through the Cyprus Research and Innovation Foundation. This funding supports collaborative research and development projects in a range of industries, including maritime transport.

CEO of Seabound Alisha Fredriksson said “We’re proud to partner with industry leaders like Heidelberg Materials and Hartmann to deliver scalable carbon capture solutions. We’re especially excited to be advancing this work in Brevik, a strategic location that’s rapidly establishing itself as a global hub for CCS with Heidelberg’s world-first facility and the Northern Lights pick up point. Together, we’re demonstrating how onboard carbon capture can accelerate emissions reductions in carbon-intensive sectors.”

Lars Erik Marcussen, Logistics project manager at Heidelberg Materials Northern Europe, said “Shipping cement is emissions-intensive, and Seabound’s system gives us a clear path to reduce those Scope 3 emissions while enhancing our circular use of captured CO₂. This project also brings us one step closer to decarbonising the logistics/transport part of our operations.”

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • UK
  • Norway
  • Seabound
  • Heidelberg Materials
  • Partnership
  • carbon capture
  • Vessel
  • Shipping
  • Transport
  • decarbonisation
  • Limestone
  • circular economy
  • CCS
  • logistics
  • Europe
  • GCW718
16 July 2025

Material Evolution to pilot MevoCem products with Tarmac

UK: Material Evolution has partnered with CRH subsidiary Tarmac to launch a pilot project to test applications of its heat-free, 85% reduced-CO₂ cement, MevoCem. The partners aim to demonstrate the suitability of MevoCem cement for use in concrete production in line with the prospective BSI Flex 350 performance-based standard.

Material Evolution’s CEO Liz Gilligan welcomed Tarmac as an ‘early adopter’ of MevoCem cement. In a post to LinkedIn, she said “We have been quietly building something game-changing with CRH and their team at Tarmac. It is bold, it is industrial scale and it is all about cutting carbon where it counts. We are only just getting started.”

Material Evolution currently operates a 120,000t/yr Mevocem plant in Wrexham, Wales.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • UK
  • Material Evolution
  • Tarmac
  • CRH
  • pilot
  • testing
  • low carbon cement
  • concrete
  • performance
  • Europe
  • GCW718
16 July 2025

China’s cement output falls by 4% in the first half of 2025

China: National cement production fell by 4% year-on-year to 815Mt in the first half of 2025, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. Output in June 2025 declined by 5% year-on-year to 155Mt. Production for the first half of 2024 stood at 850Mt, indicating a volume decrease of 35Mt. Looking forward to the third quarter of 2025, the industry expects that the cement market will continue to operate weakly, with sluggish demand ad low prices across the country.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • China
  • Output
  • Production
  • data
  • statistics
  • National Bureau of Statistics
  • Asia
  • GCW718
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