Displaying items by tag: Earthquake
Algeria: Groupe des Ciments d'Algéries (GICA) says that it exported 350,000t of clinker produced at its Chlef cement plant over the period between 1 January and 14 March 2023. Local press has reported that the producer aims to export a total of 2Mt of clinker throughout 2023. It is currently on track to reach 1.75Mt, 13% short of its target, but 17% greater than its 1.5Mt exported in 2022. The company despatched the clinker from the ports of Oran and Tenès, to customers in Africa, Europe and South and Central America. It would now like to begin delivering its clinker to Syria and Türkiye in order to help facilitate rebuilding efforts there in the wake of the catastrophic February 2023 earthquake.
OYAK Çimento/Taiwan Cement Company joint venture restarts one cement plant after Türkiye earthquake
08 February 2023Türkiye: OYAK Çimento and Taiwan Cement Company (TCC)s’ joint venture says that it has successfully restarted one of its Turkish cement plants following an earthquake on 6 February. The Netherlands-based joint venture said that two further plants remained at a standstill due to a regional power outage.
Two major tremors, of magnitudes 7.8 and 7.5 on the Richter scale, originated near Gaziantep in Türkiye’s Southeastern Anatolia Region. TCC immediately activated its Employee Care Plan to assist and arrange aid for employees and their families, dispatching 100 emergency kits by courier.
On 8 February 2023, rescuers had reported that 9460 people had died in the catastrophe, 6960 in Türkiye and 2500 in Syria.
US: Companies comprising the informal Port of Alaska Users Group at Anchorage have requested that the local government delay plans for a US$220m petroleum and cement import terminal. The group, that includes fuel companies, are concerned that the project will incur tariffs that could damage their businesses, according to the Alaska Journal of Commerce newspaper. Costs for the proposed marine terminal have become uncertain due to damage caused to the site by an earthquake in late 2018. The group is made up of eight companies including Alaska Basic Industries, a cement distributor.
Japan: Taiheiyo Cement says that an earthquake that took place in early September 2018 in Hokkaido has had a limited effect upon its business. No injuries to employees were reported. Cement production at its Kamiiso plant is continuing using in-house power generation although the unit is working on saving energy. The 6.7 magnitude earthquake has caused widespread disruption on the island, including knocking out local power generation.
Japanese sales up on reconstruction demand
26 April 2012Japan: Cement sales in Japan increased by 2.1% year-on-year in the year to 31 March 2012 to 41.91Mt, according to figures released by the Japan Cement Association. Sales were up for the first time in six fiscal years on the back of earthquake reconstruction and rebuilding.
Sales grew particularly in the Tohoku region due to very strong reconstruction demand in areas devastated by the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami. The Greater Tokyo area also contributed to the rise, seeing an increase in urban redevelopment projects.
In March 2012 alone domestic cement sales rose by 8.7% compared to 2011 to 3.64Mt, the fourth straight monthly rise.
Taiheiyo aims for big operating gains
19 March 2012Japan: Taiheiyo Cement is aiming for a group operating profit of around US$600m in the 2014 fiscal year, an increase of 90% on its projection for the current fiscal year, which ends on 31 March 2012. The target will be included in an upcoming midterm business plan that runs through to March 2015. The underlying assumptions include total domestic demand rising by 4% to 43Mt/yr. Taiheiyo Cement anticipates a 2Mt/yr boost from earthquake rebuilding.
In its domestic business, the Japanese market leader is likely to seek a 10-20% increase in its profit that will be underpinned by reconstruction demand. The operations are expected to give a profit of more than US$360m for the current fiscal year.
Taiheiyo has reported that cement production at its Ofunato plant in Iwate Prefecture has returned to about 70% of the levels seen before the 11 March 2011 earthquake and tsunami disaster. The company is scrambling to repair the production base with an eye toward returning the facility to full capacity at the end of June 2012. In the autumn the firm will start producing high-tensile cement for use in repairing infrastructure in the disaster-hit Tohoku region.
Taiheyo Cement will also shake up its sluggish US business, which is on track for an operating loss of US$108m in the current fiscal year. On top of personnel reductions, the company will continue to sell land and make other downsizing efforts. An operating profit of US$120m for US operations is targeted by the 2014 fiscal year.
Taiheiyo halves loss for first fiscal quarter
12 August 2011Japan: Taiheiyo Cement Corp has announced a net loss of USD67.7m from sales of USD2.14bn in the three months to 30 June 2011. The company's net loss was less than half the loss that it suffered in the same quarter of the previous fiscal year, which was USD140.6m. The closure of three domestic factories in the previous quarter and smaller payrolls boosted its bottom line.
While sales at the firm's mainstay cement operations were nearly unchanged from 2010, its operating loss totaled USD15.6m, far better than the USD49.5m operating loss logged in the same quarter of the previous fiscal year.
Cement demand in the Tohoku region fell in the wake of the massive earthquake that hit north east Japan in March 2011, but demand from construction of condominiums and commercial facilities rose in the Tokyo metropolitan area in particular, leading to the rise in sales.
Taiheiyo Cement expects its net profit through to the end of the current fiscal year (ending 31 March 2012) to jump by 150% to USD141.3m. The firm has also forecast that sales will drop by 2% to USD9.15bn and that operating profit will surge by 64% to USD351.5m for the full year.
Taiheiyo invests so it can use tsunami waste in cement
02 August 2011Japan: Taiheiyo Cement Corporation has announced that it will install equipment at its Ofunato plant in Iwate Prefecture later in 2011 so that it can remove salt from the wood debris created as a result of the March 2011 tsunami.
Massive amounts of wood are currently being incinerated at the site but the resulting ash is being buried. This is because the debris was soaked in seawater by the tsunami, which results in ash with a very high salt content, potentially causing damage to the kiln when it is used for cement production.
Taiheiyo Cement will install machinery to pulverise and wash the debris to remove the salt, which will make its ash suitable for use in cement. It expects to be able to process 300-500t/day of debris a day in this fashion. This investment is significant, because it has been specifically brought about because of tsunami-derived waste materials.
Taiheiyo Cement expects to restore the other kiln at the plant and resume cement production by November 2011 and so will attempt to install the debris-processing equipment as soon as possible.
Both kilns at the Ofunato factory were damaged in the earthquake but since the end of June 2011, the least damaged plant has been put to use incinerating debris from Ofunato and nearby Rikuzentakata.
Tsunami reconstruction demand calculated
09 June 2011Japan: Post-earthquake reconstruction demand is expected to boost pre-tax profits at four major Japanese cement firms by a combined USD 411m until 2016.
Assuming that their market shares remain the same, reconstruction demand will push up pre-tax profits by USD 187.2m at Taiheiyo Cement Corp, USD 100m at Sumitomo Osaka Cement Co., USD 62.4m at Mitsubishi Materials Corp. and USD 62.4m at Ube Industries Ltd.
The Japan Cement Association estimates that 10Mt of cement will be used for reconstruction projects. The figure was arrived at based on damages estimated by the Cabinet Office and how cement sales increased in the aftermath of the 1995 Kobe earthquake. The trade group believes that full reconstruction will take about five years.
Cement firms each book an operating profit of about USD 50/t of cement sold. Taiheiyo Cement controls almost 40% of the market in Japan's north-eastern Tohoku region. Reconstruction demand will push up the firm's cement sales by nearly 4Mt, translating to a USD 37.4m contribution to pre-tax profit annually for the next five years.