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08 April 2022

Ghana Standards Authority alleges illegal cement production by Empire Cement

Ghana: The Ghana Standards Authority (GSA) has reported discoveries of Empire Cement brand cement on sale on the open market despite neither it nor the Ghana Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) having issued permits for Empire Cement to produce cement. Graphic Online News has reported that the suspect products are wrongly labelled with certification marks. GSA director general Alex Dodoo warned that this constitutes an offence.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • Ghana
  • Ghana Standards Authority
  • Ghana Environmental Protection Agency
  • Empire Cement
  • certification
  • Licence
  • Quality
  • Standards
  • Environment
  • Law
  • Government
  • GCW552
08 April 2022

Vedanta Jharsuguda supplies 4000t of fly ash to ACC’s Chaibasa cement plant

India: ACC’s Chaibasa cement plant in Jharkhand has received its first instalment of fly ash for use in cement production from Vedanta Aluminium subsidiary Vedanta Jharsuguda. Global Cement News previously reported that Vedanta Aluminium had been seeking a cement industry fly ash and bauxite residue buyer for a long-term collaborative partnership in July 2021.

In the 2022 financial year, Vedanta Aluminium supplied 190,000t of fly ash to Indian cement producers.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • Holcim
  • India
  • Vedanta Aluminium
  • Vedanta Jharsuguda
  • Fly Ash
  • bauxite
  • ACC
  • circular economy
  • Supply
  • volumes
  • supplementary cementitious materials
  • Alternative raw materials
  • GCW552
08 April 2022

Namibian immigration authorities arrest eight Whale Rock Cement workers

Namibia: Immigration authorities have apprehended eight Chinese employees of Whale Rock Cement at the company’s Otjiwarongo grinding plant who failed to produce working permits during an inspection. Namibian Press Agency News has reported that seven of the workers have been in Namibia since mid-2021, while the eighth arrived in March 2022.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • Namibia
  • Whale Rock Cement
  • China
  • Staff
  • Workers
  • Law
  • grinding plant
  • Import
  • Cheetah Cement
  • GCW552
07 April 2022

CSN receives Holcim Brazil acquisition approval

Brazil: The General Superintendence of the Administrative Council for Economic Defence (CADE) has approved CSN’s takeover deal with Holcim for the latter’s Brazilian business. The América Economía newspaper has reported that the US$1.03m deal covers five cement plants, among other assets.

Holcim has said that its Latin America region remains strategically important within its global operations.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • CSN
  • CSN Cimentos
  • Holcim
  • Holcim Brasil
  • Acquisition
  • Administrative Council for Economic Defence
  • Cade
  • GCW552
  • Brazil
07 April 2022

Vicem Hoàng Mai Cement targets US$79.2m in sales in 2022

Vietnam: Vicem Hoàng Mai Cement has announced a full-year sales target of US$79.2m for 2022, down by 1.5% year-on-year from 2021 levels. Its target net profit for the year is US$656,000, more than five times its 2020 figure. The company forecasts cement production of 1.73Mt, up by 11% from 1.56Mt, and clinker production of 1.4Mt, down by 4.1% from 1.46Mt, for the year. It plans to replace 30 – 40% of the natural gypsum currently used in cement production with synthetic gypsum. It will also increase the proportion of ash and slag in its raw materials mix.

The Chúng Khoán newspaper has reported that Vicem Hoàng Mai Cement said that it is experiencing increased costs due to high raw materials and fossil fuel prices. A coal shortage has also disrupted production.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • Vietnam
  • VICEM
  • Vicem Hoang Mai Cement
  • target
  • Forecast
  • Sales
  • Profit
  • Gypsum
  • Ash
  • Slag
  • ground granulated blast furnace slag
  • supplementary cementitious materials
  • Alternative raw materials
  • costs
  • Coal
  • Gas
  • Oil
  • disruption
  • Clinker
  • Production
  • GCW552
07 April 2022

Titan Cement Group secures patent for Kamari cement plant preheater cleaning system

Greece: Titan Cement Group has secured an EU patent for its robotic remote preheater system, previously installed at the company’s Kamari cement plant in Viotia. Titan Cement Group designed the system to maximise operational efficiency and safety.

The company carried out a Euro25m precalciner installation at the Kamari plant in 2021 – 2022.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • Titan Cement
  • Greece
  • patent
  • European Union
  • preheater
  • precalciner
  • Upgrade
  • Alternative Fuels
  • automation
  • Industry 40
  • digitisation
  • efficiency
  • GCW552
07 April 2022

ThyssenKrupp Polysius secures order for two roll units

US: ThyssenKrupp Polysius has won an order for the supply of two of its roll units with compound cast roll bodies at a US cement facility. The equipment will form part of a Polycom high-pressure grinding roll. ThyssenKrupp Polysius’ Germany and US service teams will collaborate on the order, for delivery in March 2023.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • US
  • ThyssenKrupp
  • ThyssenKrupp Polysius
  • roll unit
  • Grinding
  • equipment
  • Supplier
  • GCW552
07 April 2022

Holcim Argentina launches gender inclusivity hackathon

Argentina: Holcim Argentina has launched a hackathon for project proposals aimed at boosting gender inclusivity in the Argentinian construction sector. Projects may fall along one or more target axes: awareness, education and training, enterprise or public policy. Two winning projects will claim US$300,000 each in prize money, and the contest is open to anyone over 18. The company says that the hackathon is an invite to open a conversation about the presence and appreciation of women in cement and construction.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • Holcim
  • Argentina
  • Holcim Argentina
  • Gender equality
  • diversity
  • construction
  • Jobs
  • Competition
  • policy
  • business
  • GCW552
07 April 2022

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report calls on cement industry to promote use of secondary cementitious materials and encourage carbon capture

Switzerland: The latest report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has informed policymakers that the best current route to reduce carbon emissions from cement production is through the increased use secondary cementitious materials and by encouraging the development and uptake of carbon capture. Alternatively, the development of new chemistries for building materials could help the situation but this is not expected in the short to medium term.

The report noted that 12Gt of CO2 equivalent was released directly and indirectly in 2019 from buildings and emissions from cement and steel use for building construction and renovation. These emissions included indirect emissions from offsite generation of electricity and heat, direct emissions produced onsite and emissions from cement and steel used for building construction and renovation. In sections of the IPCC report yet to be finally approved the authors said, “Cement and concrete are currently overused because they are inexpensive, durable, and ubiquitous, and consumption decisions typically do not give weight to their production emissions.”

Overall, the report concluded that average annual global greenhouse gas emissions from 2010 to 2019 were at their highest levels in human history but the rate of growth had slowed. The IPCC has called on “immediate and deep emissions reductions across all sectors” for any chance for society to limit global warming to 1.5°C. To do this global greenhouse gas emissions would have to peak before 2025 at the latest and be reduced by 43% by 2030. However, even if this did occur, it would take until the end of the 21st century for the temperature threshold to be stabilised.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • Switzerland
  • Report
  • Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
  • supplementary cementitious materials
  • carbon capture
  • CO2
  • Sustainability
  • GCW552
  • decarbonisation
06 April 2022

Calcined clay projects in Africa

Written by David Perilli, Global Cement

African cement producers have confirmed their interest in calcined clay over the last month with two new projects. The big one was announced last week when FLSmidth revealed that it had received an order from CBI Ghana. This follows the launch of a Limestone Calcined Clay (LC3) project in Malawi in mid-March 2022 in conjunction with Lafarge Cement Malawi.

FLSmidth says that its order includes the world’s largest gas suspension calciner system and a complete grinding station. The kit will be installed at CBI Ghana’s plant near Accra in the south of the country. The new clay calciner system is expected to substitute 30 - 40% of the clinker in the final product, resulting in a reduction of up to 40% CO2/t of blended cement compared to Ordinary Portland Cement (OPC). Overall the equipment manufacturers reckon that the grinding plant will reduce its CO2 emissions by 20% compared to its current output. There has been no indication of how much the order costs but CBI Ghana expects energy and fuel savings, as well as lower overheads from clinker imports.

The public announcement of the Ghana project was also foreshadowed by the visit of Professor Karen Scrivener to the Ghana Standards Authority in February 2022. This was significant because Scrivener is the head of the Laboratory of Construction Materials at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) and has been one of the key instigators of the LC3 initiative since the early 2000s. Other calcined clay cements are available such as Futurecem or polysius activated clay (see below) but LC3 is arguably the most famous given its promotion in developing countries.

The Malawi project is at a much earlier stage. The government launched the public private partnership LC3 project in mid-March 2022 in conjunction with Lafarge Cement Malawi and Terrastone, a brick manufacturer. The Ministry of Mining is currently developing a memorandum of understanding with the Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), a Germany-based development agency. India-based Tara Engineering has also been linked to the scheme.

One thing to note about the Malawi project is that it is the first calcined clay project in the cement industry based in East Africa. All the other African ones are based in West Africa. The other two projects in this region are run by Turkey-based Oyak Çimento and its subsidiary Cimpor. The first of these is a 0.3Mt/yr calcined clay and a 2400t/day cement grinding production line that was commissioned in mid-2020. This plant is based at Abidjan in Ivory Coast. The second is a new plant that Germany-based ThyssenKrupp Industrial Solutions is building for Oyak Çimento at Kribi in Cameroon. This unit has a 720t/day calcined clay and a 2400t/day cement production capacity and it will use the supplier’s ‘polysius activated clay’ technology. ThyssenKrupp’s involvement came to light in early 2020 and commissioning was scheduled for late 2021. However, no update on the state of the project has been issued so far in 2022.

As the above examples show, Sub-Saharan Africa has at least one live calcined clay plant, two plants are being built and there’s one more at the development stage. This puts the region neck-and-neck with Europe, which has a similar mixture of current and developing projects. This column has been covering the wider trend of the growing usage of various types of blended cements recently, particularly in Europe and the US, with slag cements, Portland Limestone Cement (PLC) and more. With PLC, for example, note the transition of another two North American cement plants to PLC this week alone. As for calcined clay cement, it is fascinating to see the focus move to a different part of the world. Several commentators have predicted that the future looks set to be dominated by blended cements using whichever supplementary cementitious material (SCM) is most available for each plant. The growth in calcined clay confirms this view.

Global Cement is researching clay calcination use in the cement industry for the next edition of the Global Cement Directory. Email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with any information on new industrial and research installations.

Published in Analysis
Tagged under
  • FLSmidth
  • Calcined Clay
  • CBI Ghana
  • grinding plant
  • Plant
  • GCW551
  • Limestone calcined clay cement
  • LC3
  • Malawi
  • Lafarge Cement Malawi
  • Sustainability
  • CO2
  • Government
  • Ghana Standards Authority
  • Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
  • Terrastone
  • Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit
  • Tara
  • OYAK
  • Cimpor
  • Ivory Coast
  • ThyssenKrupp Industrial Solutions
  • ThyssenKrupp
  • Cameroon
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