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Bamburi profit increases due to new subsidiary and stability 29 February 2012
Kenya: Profits at Bamburi Cement rose by 12% in 2011 backed by stronger revenues from the domestic market and its newly-expanded Ugandan subsidiary. The company earned a pre-tax profit of US$102m in 2011 compared to US$91m in 2010. The group's turnover increased by 28% to US$433m in 2011 from US$338m in 2010. Given pricing pressure in Kenya, Bamburi's main market, the better than expected revenue growth was mainly supported by increased volume sales from the company's Ugandan subsidiary, which was expanded in the last quarter of 2010.
"2011 was characterised by stable domestic prices and better export prices, due to the appreciation of the US dollar,"said Hussein Mansi, Bamburi's managing director. However, the company, like many others worldwide, suffered from a jump in power costs. For this reason, the company is still cautious regarding the local and global macroeconomic environment for 2012. "The uncertain political environment in Kenya continues to make visibility difficult," said Mansi.
China aims at bold fuel-substitution rate 29 February 2012
China: The Chinese Ministry of Information and Technology has announced that China's cement industry will source 65% of its electricity needs from waste materials by 2015, as part of the country's wide-ranging 12th Five-Year Plan period (2011-2015). It said that this would help China's building materials industry to see its energy consumption per unit of industrial value-added output reduced by 20% by 2015 compared to 2010.
Smooth test completed at Lafarge/Strabag plant 29 February 2012
Hungary: Lafarge and Strabag have successfully finished a test run at a Euro250m cement plant that they have jointly completed near Kiralyegyhaza in south west Hungary, according to Lafarge Cement Magyarorszag managing director Frederic Aubet. Mr Aubet said the test run results show the plant to be one of the most environmentally friendly in Europe.
The plant, which will turn out 0.75Mt/yr of clinker and 1Mt/yr of cement, will be fully commissioned by 2015.
FCC profit slides by two thirds in 2011 29 February 2012
Spain: Fomento de Construcciones y Contratas (FCC) closed 2011 with an attributable net profit of Euro108.2m, down 64.1% year-on-year. The slump was explained by the poor performance of FCC's cement producer Cementos Portland Valderrivas. Total sales went down by 1.3% to Euro11.76bn, while earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) fell by 8.3% to Euro1.25bn. Net debt stood at Euro6.28bn at the end of 2011, down 19% from a year earlier.
CRH sees strong performance in 2011 28 February 2012
Ireland: The Irish cement group CRH, which has cement interests in many key growth markets, has released financial results for 2011 that show an improvement in all of its fiscal indicators. Sales came in at Euro18.08bn for the year, compared to Euro17.2bn in 2010, a 5% improvement. Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) came in at Euro1.65bn, up by 3% compared to 2010 when its EBITDA was Euro1.61bn. CRH's operating profit for 2011 was Euro871m, a 25% improvement compared to 2010 and its pre-tax profit was Euro711m, up by a third compared to the Euro534m it made in 2010.
CRH's Chief Executive Myles Lee said, "The positive profit outcome for 2011 demonstrates the advantages of CRH's product and sectoral end-use balance and the benefits of the extensive reorganisation and restructuring measures implemented in response to the exceptionally difficult markets of recent years. Assuming no major economic or energy market dislocations, we expect to generate further like-for-like revenue growth in 2012 with the achievement of targeted price increases a key priority. This combined with benefits from acquisitions completed in 2011 leads us to expect further progress in the year ahead."