Kazakhstan: Steppe Cement narrowed its losses in the first half of 2025 as higher sales volumes and stronger margins offset rising energy costs and inflationary pressures, according to Sharecast. The company reported revenue of US$40.9m for the six months ending 30 June 2025, up by 19% from US$34.4m in 2024, driven by an 18% increase in sales volumes to 850,000t. Net loss fell sharply from US$3.5m to US$0.5m in 2024.
The producer said that production costs remained flat in tenge terms despite higher electricity, diesel and consumable prices. Clinker output rose by 4% in the first six months and remains on track for 8% growth in 2025. The producer has reportedly invested in ecological compliance measures, including new filters, and commissioned a dynamic separator for its third raw mill. It is also exploring ways to boost clinker capacity at its Line 6 and optimise its wider asset base.
Kazakhstan’s cement market grew by 19% in the first half of 2025, supported by favourable weather, economic growth, infrastructure spending, population increases and subsidised mortgage lending. However, Steppe expects growth to slow in the second half of 2025. The company aims to maintain its domestic market share at around 14% for the full year, with total volumes between 1.8Mt and 1.85Mt. Exports fell from 0.45Mt to 0.4Mt in the same period of 2024, while imports increased to 7.7% of the market amid higher supply from Uzbekistan. Steppe Cement reported clinker and cement inventories valued at US$7.3m.