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Simba Cement approved to buy Cemtech 20 March 2019
Kenya: The Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK) has approved the acquisition of Cemtech by Simba Cement. CAK said that, as Cemtech had been dormant for a decade, its purchase would revive the company, create jobs and improve the economy in West Pokot County.
Simba Cement is a subsidiary of Devki Group and it trades under the National Cement brand. Cemtech is a subsidiary of India’s Sanghi Group. It has been attempting to build a cement plant in West Pokot since 2010. The acquisition includes Cemtech’s land, business intellectual property, business records, equipment, goodwill, licenses, stock and third party rights.
Data from the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics used by CAK showed the leading companies in the country’s cement sector by market share were: Bamburi Cement (33%), Mombasa Cement (16%), East African Portland Cement (15%), Savannah Cement (15%), National Cement (8%) and Athi River Mining Africa (13%).
Nigerien president inaugurates Malbaza Cement plant 20 March 2019
Niger: President Issoufou Mahamadou has inaugurated Malbaza Cement Company’s plant at Malbaza. The US$83m plant has a production capacity of 0.65Mt/yr, according to the Le Sahel newspaper. It produced its first cement in late December 2018. It has 347 employees.
FCT updates on burner projects in US and beyond 20 March 2019
World: FCT Combustion has released details on new burner projects it is involved with. Selected projects include a new contract in the US to convert both kilns to natural gas firing at Ash Grove Cement’s Louisville plant in Nebraska. The order includes Gyro-Therm MKII Burners, Natural Valve Trains and NFPA 86 BMS for both kilns.
Nova Cimangola in Angola has contracted FCT to convert its 5000t/day kiln to fuel oil firing. The order includes a multi fuel main burner, calciner burners, oil heating units, oil pumping and filtering units and control panels.
FCT also provided details about a low NOx kiln conversion for an undisclosed client. Other selected cement sector projects include the commissioning of Turbu-Flex burner systems for clinker kilns at Finnsementti’s Parainen and Lappeenranta plants in Finland. These are scheduled for commissioning in March 2019 and April 2019 respectively. Baumit’s Wopfing plant in Austria is due for a natural has lance for kiln preheating to be delivered later in March 2019.
It also plans to deliver a Turbu-Flex burner system for a clinker kiln to an undisclosed client in China later in March 2019. It is based on a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) study undertaken by FCT is to allow for the firing of natural gas and to modernise the plant. Commissioning is scheduled for March 2019.
Votorantim Cimentos buys United Materials in the US 20 March 2019
US: Brazil’s Votorantim Cimentos has acquied United Materials, a producer of aggregates, concrete and building materials, for an undisclosed amount. The purchase was conducted by its subsidiary Votorantim Cimentos North America. United Materials operates four ready-mix concrete plants, one aggregate quarry and two building materials units in the western part of New York state. It has around 140 employees.
US cement consumption tops 100Mt in 2018 19 March 2019
US: Apparent cement consumption grew by 3% year-on-year to 100Mt in 2018 from 97.4Mt in 2017, according to estimates from the United States Geological Survey (USGS). Production of Ordinary Portland Cement and masonry cement rose by 2% to 87.8Mt from 86.1Mt. Imports of cement increased by 14% to 14Mt from 12.3Mt. Texas, California, Missouri, Florida, and Alabama were, in descending order of production, the five leading cement-producing states and accounted for nearly 50% of US production.
The USGS said that construction spending increased ‘modestly’ during the year, largely owing to somewhat higher spending in the residential and public construction sectors. The non-residential private building sector declined slightly. The leading cement-consuming states continued to be Texas, California, and Florida. Production of cement remained below capacity, in part reflecting both the technical and environmental issues in returning long-idle kilns to full production at some plants, and the availability of imported cement in coastal markets.