Displaying items by tag: GCW38
New captive power announced for Indocement project
24 February 2012Indonesia: Indonesia's second largest cement producer PT Indocement has announced plans to build a 2 x 30MW power plant in Pati, Central Java. The plant, which will cost around US$200m, will guarantee a power supply to Indocement's new cement factory, which is to be built in Pati later in 2012.
The new cement factory will cost around US$300m, according to Indocement's corporate secretary Sahat Panggabean. It will have a capacity of 2.5Mt/yr and will be operational by mid-2015. This will take Indocement's domestic cement capacity from 18.5Mt/yr up to 21Mt/yr.
Negotiations collapse over South Korean prices
24 February 2012South Korea: A rift between South Korea's construction, cement and ready-mixed concrete companies deepened yesterday as a series of price negotiations ended in stalemate with all sides refusing to compromise.
Squeezed by soaring raw cement costs, some 750 manufacturers of premixed concrete across the country halted production on 22 February 2012, saying they are only losing money by running their plants. They demand that builders accept an 8% increase in prices of ready-mixed concrete and that cement suppliers withdraw a recent 11% increase. They had been prepared to negotiate a lower increase, but two rounds of three-way talks convened by the government have failed to break the impasse. This has seen scores of construction projects put at risk as trucks remain idle.
"Things are not working out because all sides are not willing to step back," said Bae Jo-woong, head of the Korea Federation Ready-mixed Concrete Industry Cooperatives' (CIC) emergency committee and chief executive of Kookmin Remicon. Other officials at the CIC say that the current rates leave no margin for concrete producers and do not reflect sharp growth in cost of coal, sand, gravel and other raw materials seen in 2011.
The CIC argues that while cement manufacturers secured an 11% price hike on 1 January 2012, ready-mixed concrete makers were only allowed to raise their prices by less than 4%. "It made sense to push up cement prices that had been exorbitantly cheap. The recent increase will keep the cement firms afloat but the problem now is that construction companies are resisting raised ready-mixed concrete prices," said Park Jong-rok, an analyst with a Seoul-based brokerage.