Displaying items by tag: India
India Cements promotes sulphate-resistant cement
31 May 2016India: The India Cements Limited (ICL) has started promoting a new sulphate-resistant cement. The new product, Coromandel SRC, is a specialty-blended cement targeted for construction in aggressive environment such as a coastal areas. It will be manufactured at its Vishnupuram Plant in Telangana, according to the Hindu newspaper.
The new product is part of a business drive by the cement producer to improve its relationship with the distribution network. Other initiatives include extending technical support to its stockists and dealers in marketing new products. The company is also promoting Coromandel Duralite Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (AAC) blocks which are made from cement, fly ash, lime and alumina, an aeration agent.
India Cements revenue falls by 5% to US$636m
26 May 2016India: India Cements revenue has fallen by 5% year-on-year to US$636m for the financial year that ended on 31 March 2016 from US$663m in the same period in 2015 - 2016. Its net profit rose to US$20.5m from US$4.39m.
In the notes provided with its annual financial results the Indian cement producer reported that its was appealing against a provisional attachment order under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002 attaching certain assets of the company for a value of US$17.9m. It also noted that according to the condition imposed by Board of Cricket Control in India, India Cements provided a guarantee for the purpose of guaranteeing performance and compliance by Chennai Super Kings of the obligations of the franchise under the agreement. The Chennai Super Kings cricket team was suspended for two years in mid 2015 due to a corruption scandal.
India: Ambuja Cement has completed a 0.9Mt/yr capacity upgrade at its Sankrail grinding plant in West Bengal. The US$50m upgrade was commissioned on 24 May 2016. The cement grinding plant has increased its production capacity to 2.4Mt/yr from 1.5Mt/yr. The upgrade was originally announced in late 2012.
India: The Calcutta High Court has dismissed two petitions by members of the Birla family intending to challenge the takeover of Reliance Infrastructure by Birla Corporation. Justice Jyotirmoy Bhattacharya held that the petitions were not maintainable stating that decisions taken by the directors could not be called into question by the probate court.
The challenge by the Birla family represents the latest move in a long-running legal battle between the family and accountant R S Lodha, father of the current chairman of Birla Corporation. The cement company announced in February 2016 that it was planning to buy Reliance Infrastructure for US$715m.
India: JK Lakshmi Cement has reported that its total income for the financial year that ended on 31 March 2016 rose by 14.8% year-on-year to US$398m from US$347m in the same period in the previous year. However, its net profit fell by 93% to US$9.3m from US$14.2m. For the fourth quarter of its financial year, the Indian cement producer reported that its net profit grew nearly eight times to US$7.2m from US$0.9m.
India: The Debt Recovery Tribunal (DRT) in Nagpur has barred Murli Industries from selling or mortgaging its assets due to outstanding debts of over US$275m. The nine directors of the company have been asked not to leave the country without prior permission of the tribunal, according to the Times of India. Accusations of financial irregularities have also been levelled at the directors by the tribunal.
Murli Industries runs a cement plant in Chandrapur, Maharashtra that has been described by the Times as ‘practically closed down’. Workers at the unit have not been paid reportedly since the autumn of 2015. Subsequently they have preventing the company from transporting cement or raw materials out of the plant until they are compensated.
India: The Heavy Industry Minister Anant Geete has arranged a meeting with officials of the Telangana state government and the Cement Corporation of India (CCI) to discuss the possibility of opening the closed CCI cement plant in Adilabad. The meeting will be held in June 2016 at Hyderabad or New Delhi, according the Hindu newspaper.
The meeting is the second occasion that ministers from Telangana have met with Geete to lobby for the reopening of the CCI plant. Options being considered include privatising the plant or retaining control by the government. The cement plant has a production capacity of 4Mt/yr.
India: On 9 May 2016 Dalmia Cement withdrew their challenge to a conditional approval given by India’s anti-trust regulator to the proposed merger of Lafarge and Holcim in india. The Competition Appellate Tribunal (CAT) has accepted Dalmia’s decision, paving the way for the sale of Lafarge India’s 11Mt/yr of cement capacity as a part of the merger conditions.
A statement from LafargeHolcim stated, “We are happy Dalmia has withdrawn their appeal to the CAT and look forward to completing the sale of Lafarge India.”
India: Cement maker Burnpur Cement plans to invest US$75m to increase the company’s grinding capacity from 0.6Mt/yr to 3Mt/yr, according to the company's vice chairman and managing director Ashok Gutgutia. He said that the investment would be spent over the next three to four years.
Burnpur Cement is a small Indian cement producer that operates two plants, one in Asansol (West Bengal) and one in Patratu (Jharkhand). Each plant operates at a capacity of 0.3Mt/yr.
How the investment will be split between the plants is unclear, but the announcement comes as the company is building a third 2Mt/yr plant in West Bengal, which was announced previously. When the three projects are complete Burnpur will have increased its capacity by nearly 10-fold, from 0.6Mt/yr to 5Mtyr.
India: India's upper house of Parliament has approved changes to the country's mining law to make it easier to sell mining rights, a move that could spur acquisitions in the cement and mining sectors.
Lawmakers approved the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) (Amendment) Bill, allowing the transfer of mining rights by companies that received them through a government allocation. The bill was cleared by the lower house of Parliament in March 2016 and now needs to be signed off by the President to become law.
In the past, mining rights had either been distributed to companies through government auctions or through individual allocations, a method that raised questions about arbitrariness in decision-making.
In 2015 the government implemented a new law that made it mandatory to auction mining rights. It also permitted the transfer of mining rights previously won through auction, but was silent on whether rights received through a government allocation for captive uses could be sold.
The latest rule provides clarity and could help speed up proposed merger deals such as UltraTech Cement’s planned takeover of Jaypee Group's cement plants and LafargeHolcim's plan to sell two cement units to Birla Corp.