
Displaying items by tag: Russia
Eurocement forecasts 10% rise in Russian cement consumption in 2013
05 December 2012Russia: Eurocement Group expects cement product consumption to grow by 12% in Russia in 2012 and by 8% - 10% in 2013, according to its president Mikhail Skorokhod.
"We expect cement product consumption to reach 64Mt this year, compared to 56Mt in 2011. There will be growth of over 12%. This is very significant growth and all construction complex needs in Russia are covered by high quality cement from Russian manufacturers," he said. The forecast for the rise in cement consumption in 2013 is 8%-10%, to around 70Mt, this highest output in the post-Soviet period, according to Skorokhod. The production capacity of cement plants in Russia has grown by around 20Mt/yr since 2009.
Skorokhod estimated that the rise in cement prices over the 'past few years' was comparable to the rise in the cost of natural monopoly services and tariffs, from 7% to 15% per year. He predicted that the price of cement would also fall by this range as new capacity comes on line.
Eurocement announced its plans to invest US$388m in a 1.3Mt/yr plant Sverdlovsk plant on 3 December 2012. The Russian construction materials group has 16 cement plants in Russia, Ukraine and Uzbekistan with a combined production capacity of 39.2Mt/yr of cement.
Eurocement to invest US$388m in Sverdlovsk plant
03 December 2012Russia: Eurocement Group plans to invest around US$388m towards building a 1.3Mt/yr plant in the Sverdlovsk Region, according to the region's government. The project at the Nevyansky Tsementnik plant is expected to be finished by 2015. It will create around 1000 jobs for the construction and around 400 jobs for the operation of the line. Eurocement will invest its own and borrowed funds into the construction.
Extension of Russian contract for FLSmidth
28 November 2012Russia: The Danish cement plant manufacturer FLSmidth has won a contract worth approximately Euro27m from the Russian company Kaluga Cement Plant LLC to supply additional equipment for its cement plant currently under construction in the Kaluga province, 300km southwest of Moscow. The contract is an extension of the contract that FLSmidth won in 2011 from Kaluga for the supply of a complete cement plant.
"The award of this order to FLSmidth underlines the strength of our good relations with the customer and the value of our long-standing local presence in Russia," said Group CEO Jørgen Huno Rasmussen. "The order is also a good example of the general signs of a positive development in the cement market."
Holcim announces Euro350m upgrade in Volsk
24 October 2012Russia: Holcim Russia has decided to invest Euro350m towards upgrading its Volskcement plant in the Saratov region. The modernisation project will include the installation of a new 'semi-wet' production line with a capacity of 2500t/day. Currently the plant uses a wet process. Construction will take two years and is expected to start in the second quarter 2013. The new line will be commissioned in the third quarter of 2016.
Iskitimtsement output rises 23.1%
03 October 2012Russia: RATM Holding's Iskitimcement Cement Plant has reported a rise in its output by 23.1% year-on-year to 1.12Mt for January to September 2012. Deliveries rose by 28.9% to 1.29Mt in the same period.
In July to September 2012 Iskitimtsement produced 535,000t of cement and sold 579,369t. In September 2012 the company's output reached 168,000t and sales were 187,434t. Iskitimtsement has said that it plans to boost 2012 production by 9.4% year-on-year to 1.4Mt/yr.
Nationally, cement production in Russia to expected to reach 61Mt in 2012 as the construction industry continues to drive growth. During the first half of 2012, construction output managed to maintain a growth pace above that of the gross domestic product (GDP), recording a 5.4% expansion in year-on-year terms while GDP managed to expand by only 4.5% for the same period. At the same time, the production of cement in Russia totalled nearly 27.8Mt in the first half of 2012, representing a 14.1% annual increase. The sector is expected to further intensify in the near future due to large investments by public authorities in construction projects.
Eurocement announce US$480m plant in Stavropol
24 September 2012Russia: Eurocement has announced that it will build a US$480m cement plant in the Stavropol region of Russia with a production capacity of 1.3Mt/yr. Construction will take place in the Spasskoe village of Blagodarnenskiy District.
The new plant will cover an area of 40 hectares and will produce 3500t/day of clinker. Its power consumption will be 35MW, its electrical consumption will be 105kWh/t of cement, its gas consumption will be 103Mm3/yr and restrictions of dust emissions will be 20mg/Nm3. The plant will have a staff of 400 people, with the potential to create 1000 additional jobs. The project will be implemented under a public-private partnership and has been submitted to the prime minister of the Russian Federation Dmitry Medvedev. The plant is expected to be completed by 2015.
"The objective of Eurocement is to reduce the cost of cement production whilst maintaining compliance with the highest standards of product quality and conformity of production of the world's environmental requirements," said Eurocement president Mikhail Skorokhod.
New CEO appointed at Zhigulevskie Stroymaterialy
22 August 2012Russia: Nikolay Skornyakov has been appointed chief executive officer of Zhigulevskie Stroymaterialy plant, part of the Eurocement Group. Previously, Skornyakov was the technical director of the cement plant located in Zhigulewsk in Samara.
Skornyakov was born in 1950 in Ulyanovsk. In 1980 he graduated from the Belgorod State Technological Institute of Construction Materials focusing on chemical technology binders. He has since worked in the cement industry for about 40 years, starting at a plant in Ulyanovsk in 1969 as an electrician. In 2001 he was appointed technical director of the Ulyanovsk plant subsequently becoming first deputy chief executive officer.
In 2005 Skornyakov became chief executive officer of the Pikalevskiy plant. In 2006 he became the deputy chief executive office – technical director of the Mikhailovcement plant in the Ryazan region. Since 2009 Skornyakov has been the deputy chief executive officer - technical director of the Zhigulevskie Stroymaterialy plant.
New Eurocement contact for KHD
02 May 2012Russia: The leading Russian cement producer Eurocement has placed an order worth more than Euro80m with KHD for a new cement plant to be built in Stavropol, Russia.
The contract between Stavropolsky Zavod Stroitelnih Materialov, a member of the Eurocement Group, and ZAB Zementanlagenbau GmbH Dessau, a subsidiary of KHD Humboldt Wedag International AG, is for a new cement plant with an annual output of 1.3Mt/yr.
KHD's scope will cover the supply of production equipment, starting from raw material crushing all the way up to cement loading and packing. KHD will also supply automation and control equipment for the new production line. In addition, the companies concluded a separate contract for erection and commissioning supervision services, which is part of the total order volume.
The project will be booked as order intake immediately upon receipt of a down payment.
Eurocement’s Voronezh plant on track for July 2012
25 April 2012Russia: Alexei Gordeev, governor of the Voronezh Region, has met with Mikhail Skorokhod, president of Eurocement, to discuss the ongoing construction of a new plant.
Skorokhod noted during the meeting that construction of the plant was in its final stage, with an expected completion date of construction in May 2012. The plant will have a clinker capacity of 6000t/day (2Mt/yr) and occupy an area of 33.4 hectares. By July 2012 the company expects production of the first tonne of cement. By August 2012 landscaping will be completed. In 2012 the new plant is expected to produce 0.5Mt, with full capacity met by 2014.
Gordeev and Skorokhod also discussed development of local transport infrastructure, including the reconstruction of the railway station. Eurocement offered to fund design works for the construction of an overpass and an adjacent road whilst the governor raised the possibility of including the cost of improving transport infrastructure in the region in the regional budget.
Russian production struggling to top 2007-2008 levels
11 April 2012Russia: The Russian cement market remains unable to match its performance in 2007-2008. Although output grew by 15% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2012, Russian companies produced 'just' 9.61Mt of cement. Meanwhile cement prices continue to increase in the country but they are not expected to reach the pre-crisis levels before 2019.
In the first quarter of 2012 production climbed by 15% year-on-year to 9.61Mt according to an estimate made by CMPro Ltd, a Moscow-based company. By comparison in the first quarters of 2007and 2008, production exceeded 11Mt.
According to the President of Lafarge Cement, production in 2012 will rise by 10% against the 2011 level of 56.2Mt, as the market restores due to new construction and infrastructure projects. 2011 was a record year since 2007 as 63.2 million m2 of housing was commissioned. In line with this view Siberian Cement expects cement prices to increase by 12-15% in the summer of 2012 and the CEO of Sukholozhsktsementa Maksim Sotnikov believes that the annual price growth will reach 10%.
Less optimistically, the general director of Basecement Vyacheslav Shmatov said that cement imports are curbing the growth of prices on the domestic market. According to CMPro Ltd, in the first quarter of 2012 imports doubled year-on-year to 340,000t.