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Algeria: China’s CBMI has signed a contract with ASEC Cement to build a 4500t/day clinker production line at ASEC Cement’s Djelfa plant. The unit was originally partially built by ASEC Egypt in 2008 and had completed 90% of civil work before it was suspended due to the financial crash. Local company ETRHB Haddad and the Algerian subsidiary of China State Construction Engineering Corporation (CSCEC) took control of ASEC Cement in 2017 allowing the Djelfa project to continue.

The engineering, procurement and construction contract covers limestone crushing to cement packaging and delivery. It includes engineering, equipment and steel structure procurement, civil construction, erection, training and commissioning. Construction is scheduled to take 19 months from the contract’s activation date. As such the plant could be operational by the end of 2019.

Zambia: Weye Construction Materials has submitted plans to the Zambia Environmental Management Agency to build a 1Mt/yr cement plant in Chilanga district. The investment for the proposed project, including quarry and full clinker production line, has been set at the low value of US$45m.

According to the application the project will build a raw material mill single–stage cyclone pre-heater, a coal-fired rotary kiln and a packaging unit. Bag filters will be used for dust recovery at the bagging facility and material transfer points. Electrostatic precipitators will be installed for gas cleaning to avert nuisances from the kiln. WEYE added that the project would also create 555 jobs.

WEYE Construction Materials is owned by two Chinese shareholders: Zhang Yiwei and Lu Qiang. It is a subsidiary of China’s Weye Construction Group, based in Jiangsu province and established in 1999.

Morocco: Cement consumption fell by 6.91% to 3.31Mt in the first three months of 2018 from 3.55Mt in the same period of 2017. Consumption decreased particularly in the Dakhla - Oued Ed-Dahab, Fès - Meknès and Béni Mellal - Khénifra regions according to Ministry of Housing data. It also dropped sharply in March 2018 by 15.1% to 1.24Mt.

Brazil: Votorantim’s cement division’s sales fell by 7% year-on-year to US$3.24bn in 2017 from US$3.48bn in 2016. Its adjusted earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) fell by 26% to US$515m from US$693m. The company blamed the continued decline on the poor market in Brazil. Outside of Brazil, Votorantim Cimentos reported positive markets in most territories, apart from Tunisia. Overall the group’s sales rose by 5% to US$7.95bn from US$7.59bn.

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