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Sierra Leone: The Sierra Leone Cement Corporation (LEOCEM), a subsidiary of HeidelbergCement, will start selling a slag-based cement in June 2014. According to Victor John Cole, the laboratory head at LEOCEM, the new slag cement will be high-quality and suitable for under water construction. Cole made the announcement during the 20th anniversary celebrations at the company's grinding plant in Cline Town, Freetown.
Spain: French cement multinational Lafarge has reportedly withdrawn from talks that it was having regarding the acquisition of a Catalonian cement plant from the Spanish sector player Cementos Portland Valderrivas (CPV). The decision was attributed to Lafarge's merger project with Swiss cement maker Holcim, which will most probably lead to the sale of assets in European countries, including Spain.
Lafarge had been negotiating the acquisition of the Vallcarca plant for several months. The plant has a cement capacity of 1.3Mt/yr. Lafarge previously placed a Euro20m offer for the facility, which was rejected by CPV.
Huaxin forecasts huge percentage gains 16 April 2014
China: Huaxin Cement Co Ltd has announced that it anticipates its net profit for the first quarter of 2014 to grow by 350-400% year-on-year, compared to a profit of US$4.14m in the corresponding period of 2013. The Hubei Province-based company attributes its forecasted profit growth to increasing cement product sales and prices.
Chinese city bans new cement plants 16 April 2014
China: The government of Tianjin in northern China has said that it will not approve any new cement, steel or non-ferrous metals plants in a bid to fight pollution, according to state media. The statement follows a central government plan from 2013 to restrict new manufacturing in key industrial centres.
China has identified the region that includes Beijing, Hebei and Tianjin as one of the key targets of a programme to reduce the emissions of 'heavy' industries including cement, steel and thermal power, according to reports from Reuters. It has promised in policy documents released since 2012 to block the construction of new industrial plants in three major 'low-emission' regions, including Beijing-Hebei-Tianjin, the Yangtze river delta region centring on Shanghai and the Pearl river delta region in southern Guangdong Province. China's environment ministry has said that these regions are responsible for 40% of the country's total cement output despite covering just 8% of the country's total area.
Tajikistan: Tajik President Emomali Rahmon was expected to give the green light for the construction of 0.5Mt/yr cement plant in Vahdat on Wednesday 16 April 2014. The Ministry of Industry and New technologies of Tajikistan (MoINT) says that an estimated budget for construction of the plant is US$81.5m. It will be built by China-based Beijing Uni-Construction Group, which will deliver the plant to Tajik firm Vahdat Cement on a turnkey basis.