Displaying items by tag: Dispute
India: Police arrested 50 truck drivers and union leaders at protests outside Ambuja Cements’ Darlaghat cement plant in Himachal Pradesh on 1 February 2023. The events marked the 50th day of on-going protests against Adani Group’s closure of the Darlaghat and Gagal cement plant following its acquisition of Ambuja Cements and ACC in September 2022. The Times of India newspaper has reported that cement truck driver’s unions are now threatening to escalate the protests to a ‘chakka jam’ demonstration across Himachal Pradesh. This would involve blocking roads at five planned locations in the state. Union representatives will meet Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu on 3 February 2022. Sukhu has repeatedly expressed support for protestors, saying that the state will not tolerate exploitation.
United News of India has reported that protestors on 1 February 2023 voiced criticism of Indian ‘lawlessness’ and of Adani Group and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) power ‘monopoly’ in the country.
India: The India Cements will pay each of its 500 cement plant workers an additional US$736/yr, effective retroactively from the start of the 2023 Indian financial year on 1 April 2022. This will subsequently rise by up to another US$736/yr from the start of the 2026 financial year. The Hindu BusinessLine News has reported that the move is the result of talks with workers' unions. The India Cements additionally agreed to pay a total US$202,000/yr in premiums on medical insurance policies for all cement plant employees.
The India Cements operates 10 cement facilities in India.
US: Mexico-based GCC must pay US$36.1m in compensation to Bolivia-based Compañia de Inversiones Mercantiles (CIMSA) in their dispute over deal concerning shares in Sociedad Boliviana de Cemento (SOBOCE). A US court issued the latest ruling after refusing to recognise an earlier judgment by a Bolivian court on 10 January 2023.
Milenio News has reported that GCC is expected to appeal the US court's decision.
Obstacles for Obajana
26 October 2022Dangote Cement’s Obajana plant has been the focus of an argument between the cement producer and the Kogi State Government (KSG) in recent weeks. The integrated plant was forced to close in early October 2022 and then reopened in mid-October 2022 following an order by the Federal Government. The dispute then entered a legal phase, with the state government taking Dangote Cement to court. The case is ongoing.
The current stage of the disagreement dates back to late August 2022 when the Kogi State House of Assembly reportedly set up a committee to investigate the shares that the state owned in Dangote Cement and other organisations as part of an initiative to examine tax revenue from mining companies. By the end of September 2022 this had turned into a discussion about how exactly Dangote Cement had originally acquired its shares in the Obajana cement plant in Kogi state as well as how much tax it was paying. In early October 2022 the local government ordered the closure of the plant. Events then turned nasty as local vigilantes attacked the plant and hurt some of its staff. In the general unrest that followed the Kogi State House of Assembly was destroyed in a fire. The plant partially reopened fairly quickly and then fully once the Federal Government intervened. Legal action was then started at the Kogi High Court.
Unusually for this kind of disagreement both sides have published detailed information on their respective arguments. Dangote Cement’s parent company Dangote Industries outlined how it originally came to build and own the Obajana cement plant. In short, it signed deals in 2002 and 2003 to buy a 100% stake in Obajana Cement from the KSG, before the plant was built, with the proviso that the state could later buy a 5% share within five years. Dangote Industries then independently financed and built the plant and Obajana Cement later became Dangote Cement. Crucially, according to Dangote Industries, KSG never bought its 5% share. On the opposing side, the KSG has published what it says is the original contract and annexes that it signed with Dangote Industries. This agrees with some of what Dangote Industries has said, especially the part about the option to buy a 5% stake within five years. However, according to reports in the local press, KSG is attempting to persuade the judiciary to cancel the original contract on the grounds that it lacked clear consideration of what should pass from the state to Dangote Industries in return for giving the latter full ownership of Obajana Cement. In other words, the KSG is querying whether the contract is valid given that it received apparently nothing for giving a company away.
The Obajana cement plant was later built and it became operational in 2007. Today it is the largest cement plant in Nigeria and one of the largest in Africa. It produces around a third of the country’s cement and this is why its closure earlier in October 2022 became a national issue. Since the early 2000s Dangote Cement has become the biggest cement producer in Sub-Saharan Africa. It is both a success story for the region and the world.
There may be issues with the perceived or actual contribution Dangote Cement is making locally in Kogi State. These are the kinds of issues that both companies and governments contend with continually. Companies consider where it is cost effective to place investments and governments try to entice them. It is possible that the KSG gave Obajana Cement to Dangote Industries in what it retrospectively considers is a poor deal. It is also possible that Dangote Cement has not paid sufficient tax, although it strongly denies this, and the KSG seems to have moved on from this line of attack. What may be the bigger issue here is if Dangote Cement is perceived to have not paid its dues in Kogi State. However, it seems odd that the KSG would suddenly decide to go after Dangote Industries nearly 20 years after agreeing to the deal. It also seems strange that no lawyer for either party flagged the consideration issue at the time. Thankfully calmness has now prevailed in the state and the cement plant remains open. It is for the courts to decide the validity of the original contract between Dangote Industries and the KSG.
Kogi State government takes Dangote Industries to court
21 October 2022Nigeria: The government of Kogi State has filed a lawsuit against Dangote Cement's parent company Dangote Industries. The state government claims no payment was received for Dangote Cement's acquisition of the Obajana cement plant upon its privatisation in 2002, according to the Advocate newspaper. If the legal case is successful it could void the cement producer’s contract with the state government.
The National Security Council ordered the reopening of the Obajana cement plant in the national interest on 14 October 2022, following its closure by order of the Kogi State Assembly.
Nigeria: The government of Kogi State ordered Dangote Cement to shut down its Obajana cement plant within 48 hours on 13 October 2022. Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello also ordered the release of impounded Dangote Cement trucks across the state.
Bello thanked Kogi residents for their “resoluteness in the ownership impasse between Dangote Group and the state government.” He added, "While the state government recognises the right of the citizens to peaceful protest, as we witnessed across the state yesterday, we urge people to remain civil and law abiding and to give room for constitutionalism. Breakdown of law and order will not be in the interest of anyone."
Lorry drivers blocked the Abuja - Lokoja road in protest against the closure on 14 October 2022, according to the Advocate newspaper. Meanwhile, a gang has raided the plant, destroying property and shot firearms at the 27 employees who remained on site.
Nigerian parliament orders Obajana cement plant closure
06 October 2022Nigeria: The House of Assembly of the Nigerian parliament has ordered Dangote Cement to suspend its operations at the Obajana cement plant until the company presents 'credible evidence' of its acquisition of the plant from the government. The Premium Times newspaper has reported that the state and Dangote Cement concluded a deal for transfer of ownership of the plant in 2002. Kogi State Commissioner Kingsley Fanwo says that Dangote Cement has failed to show evidence of its payment for the asset.
Local people petitioned the state for an enquiry into the plant's legal status after it allegedly created industrial pollution 'bordering on' a hazard. Protestors have reportedly 'driven out' staff from the plant.
Canada: Workers at St Mary’s Cement’s Port-Daniel-Gascons cement plant have voted in favour of taking strike action in a dispute over matters including wages and pensions. Local press has reported that workers and the company, a subsidiary of Brazil-based Votorantim Cimentos, will sit in negotiations on 13 and 14 June 2022. Employees previously rejected a ‘final and comprehensive’ offer from the company earlier in May 2022.
India: A Telangana court has blocked Southern Power Distribution Company of Telangana from disconnecting the power supply to some of Anjani Portland Cement’s cement operations in the state. The power supply is seeking to take the measure among other ‘coercive steps’ in an on-going dispute with the producer. Reuters News has reported that Southern Power Distribution Company of Telangana has issued a demand letter for alleged breach of obligations by Anjani Portland Cement.
JK Lakshmi Cement’s Durg cement plant resumes cement dispatches
21 October 2021India: JK Lakshmi Cement resumed dispatches of cement as usual from its Durg cement plant in Chhattisgarh on 19 October 2021. India InfoLine News has reported that this followed the ending of a strike by the Chhattisgarh Cement Transport Association (CTA) on 18 October 2021.
The company said “The illegal strike called by the CTA has since been called off by them. It is hoped that normality will be restored shortly.”