12 July 2016
Bedeschi to supply Tan Thang cement plant 12 July 2016
Vietnam: Bedeschi has sign a contract for the supply of all the raw material crushing, transporting and storage machines at the Tan Thang cement plant Nhe An province. The new plant will have a cement production capacity of 2Mt/yr.
The order includes:
- One crusher for limestone with a capacity up to 850t/hr,
- A limestone circular storage with a stacking capacity of 850t/hr and a reclaiming capacity of 350t/hr,
- One clay crushing group with an apron feeder and a Bedeschi double roller crusher, suitable to crush sticky and moist material, with a capacity of 300t/hour; a stacking and reclaiming system for raw material additives (clay, iron ore, silica) made up of a luffing stacker with a capacity of 300t/hour and a bucket reclaimer with a capacity of 200t/hr,
- A stacking and reclaiming system for coal with a luffing and travelling stacker with a capacity of 200t/hr,
- A side type scraper reclaimer with a capacity 100t/hr.
The supply includes all connecting belt conveyors, including one long conveyor that connects the quarry to the cement plant, and all the dedusting filters for the conveyors. No value has been released for the order.
Real estate body to boycott Shree Cement 12 July 2016
India: The National Capital Region (NCR) division of the Confederation of Real Estate Developers’ Associations of India (CREDAI) has decided to boycott Shree Cement due to complaints of alleged inconsistent price increases and shortages of cement. The property body also intends to file a complaint with the Competition Commission of India, according to the Economic Times newspaper.
“Shree Cement is arbitrarily increasing prices and stopping supply in between, demanding a price revision, despite taking an advance,” said a CREDAI NCR spokesperson. “Through excuses such as plant not functioning properly and issues with transportation these companies are not meeting the delivery deadlines, thereby affecting the builders’ construction timelines.”
The NCR CREDAI previously stopped using cement from UltraTech and Lafarge, on alleged grounds of cartelisation and malpractices. However it reversed this decision when the cement producers reduced their prices. Shree Cement has not commented on the matter.
Zambia: Lafarge Zambia and Zambia Railways have signed a transport agreement to improve the delivery of production inputs for cement production and to distribute clinker and cement products locally and to neighbouring countries. The deal is intended to complement other modes of transport, reduce reliance on roads and promote sustainability. The agreement will run for three years and is subject to renewal.
“We continue to have a high fleet of trucks on our roads responsible for both inbound and outbound logistics, in excess of 500 trucks. The pressure exerted on the roads continues to be high as a result of this activity. Therefore, this partnership will relieve some pressure off our roads as it complements other modes of transportation currently in use today and we also anticipate to reduce the safety risk on the road,” said Chrissie Moloseni, Chief Financial Officer of Lafarge Zambia at the signing ceremony on 8 July 2016.
Christopher Musonda, the Chief Executive Officer of Zambia Railways, added that the company has devised a new transport model to improve efficiency. The Wagon Monitoring and Control System (WAMCO) is designed in a way that will enable customers to have dedicated wagons for all movements, thereby improving efficiency levels.