
29 September 2023
US cement shipments fall in July 2023 29 September 2023
US: Shipments of Portland and blended cement, including imports, in the US and Puerto Rico in July 2023 came to an estimated 9.3Mt, according to the United States Geological Survey (USGS). The figure was 2.1% lower than in July 2022, when 9.5Mt of cement was shipped. Of the total blended volume reported in July 2023, 4.9Mt (98%) was estimated to be Portland-limestone cement.
US-wide shipments for the January 2023 to July 2023 period came to 60.4Mt, a 2% decrease from 61.7Mt reported in the same period of 2022. The leading producing states for Portland and blended cement in July 2023 were, in descending order: Texas; Missouri; California; Florida; and Michigan. Together these five states accounted for 39% of all cement produced in the country during the month. The leading cement-consuming states were, in descending order: Texas; California; Florida; Georgia; and Ohio. Together these states jointly received 38% of all shipments in July 2023.
Dangote calls price slash rumours ‘fake news’ 29 September 2023
Nigeria: Dangote Group has described online reports that it would halve the price of its 50kg bags of cement as ‘fake news.’ Anthony Chiejine, Spokesperson for Dangote Group, was responding to apparently unfounded reports that prices would tumble on 1 October 2023.
Earlier, Bahir Ahmad, a media aide to former Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, saying on X (formerly Twitter) “The Dangote Group has denied the trending reports that it has reduced the price of cement.”
The online rumour is thought to have gained traction after Dangote’s rival BUA Group chair Abdul Samad Rabiu disclosed that he had discussed a substantial potential price reduction with current President Bola Ahmed Tinubu earlier in September 2023.
The prospect of lower cement prices in Nigeria is often reported, but prices remain stubbornly high. On 28 September 2023, the regional monarch of Idjerhe Kingdom, King Udurhie I, called on the new national President Bola Ahmed Tinbu to reopen the mothballed Madewell Cement Factory in Idjerhe, and five others like it throughout Nigeria, in an effort to increase supply and introduce competition to a market dominated by two or three major players.
King Udurhie toured the Madewell facility with regional chiefs, stating “It is 15 years ago that this project was brought down by cabals in the cement industry. As a King of this land, I see pain and I believe that, with the coming in of President Tinubu, a man who is business-oriented, he knows the importance of the cement sector to the Nigerian economy. The cement industry is too large for one man or one company to deal in, no individual can do this.”
Vietnamese cement production falls in first nine months of 2023 29 September 2023
Vietnam: Vietnam is estimated to have produced 89.8Mt of cement in the first nine months of 2023, a year-on-year fall of 4% according to the state-run General Statistics Office (GSO). In September 2023, the country’s cement output is projected to have reached 10.2Mt, a year-on-year rise of 5%.
Yura announces Arequipa expansion 29 September 2023
Peru: Cemento Yura has announced plans to expand its cement plant in Arequipa. Luis Diaz, vice-president of the Cement, Concrete and Lime Division of Gloria Group, the parent company of Cemento Yura, announced the plans during the Perumin 36 Mining Convention, which also took place in Arequipa on 26 - 29 September 2023.
Speaking to the Gestión newspaper, Diaz revealed that Yura is finalising a project to double its capacity. The plant currently has a capacity of 3Mt/yr, most of which is produced by its largest line, Line 3. The new line will cost US$132m and have a capacity of 3Mt/yr.
Diaz reported that engineering studies were complete and that environmental impact permits were in the process of being acquired. No additional area will be required for the new line, which is expected to be operational in 2027.