
Displaying items by tag: Trinidad Cement
Trinidad & Tobago: Trinidad Cement has asked the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) to make its competitor Rock Hard Cement pay more than a 5% tariff on imports. It follows a ruling by the council of trade ministers in the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) in March 2019 that agreed to a classification of Rock Hard Cement’s products in Trinidad leading to duties of up to 5%, according to the Nation newspaper. The case has been referred to the CCJ for final arbitration in June 2019.
Trinidad & Tobago: The council of trade ministers in the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) has agreed to the classification of Rock Hard Cement’s products in Trinidad. Rock Hard Cement has faced legal action from its competitor Arawak Cement about the designation of its products and the tariffs they incur, according to the Barbados Today newspaper. The matter will be referred to the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) in June 2019 for final arbitration.
Trinidad Cement, the owner of Arawak Cement, took legal action against Rock Hard Cement in the CCJ alleging that the cement importer was misclassifying its products as ‘other hydraulic cement’ instead of ‘Portland cement-building cement grey’ leading to a lower import duty. However, the World Customs Organisation and CARICOM’s Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED) have both ruled in favour of Rock Hard Cement. As such it only incurs a tariff of up to 5%. Rock Hard Cement said that it expects the CCJ to uphold COTED’s ruling in June 2019.
Unitherm Cemcon wins burner order from Trinidad Cement
25 February 2019Trinidad: Austria’s Unitherm Cemcon has been awarded the contract for a rotary kiln burner for kiln 3 at Trinidad Cement’s 1230t/day plant. The burner for the wet process unit will be designed for natural gas and liquid alternative fuel. No value for the order has been disclosed.
The scope of supply includes: one MAS/5/EGSO model rotary kiln burner; a flame monitoring device for the rotary kiln burner; a gas electric ignition burner with control box and touch screen; kiln burner trolley engineering and main components for local manufacturing; primary air fan with sound protection housing; and an emergency cooling air fan.
Other recent projects from Unitherm Cemcon include the commissioning of a firing system for BUA Cement’s new plant in Edo State, Nigeria and delivery of firing equipment for a project in Argentina in late 2018.
Guillermo Rojo de Diego appointed general manager of Trinidad Cement
13 February 2019Trinidad: Trinidad Cement has appointed Guillermo Rojo de Diego as the general manager. He succeeds Rodolfo Martinez, who held the position from mid-2017. Martinez will take up another role with Cemex, the owner of Trinidad Cement.
Cement import tariff upheld by Caribbean Court Of Justice
26 December 2018Barbados: The Caribbean Court Of Justice has ruled in favour of Trinidad Cement on maintaining a 60% tariff on imports of cement. The subsidiary of Mexico’s Cemex and its own subsidiary Arawak Cement complained that import company Rock Hard Cement was only being taxed by 5%, according to the Nation News newspaper. However, the case will continue as the ruling only refers to hydraulic cement. It is unclear what classification of cement that Rock Hard Cement is importing.
Claudia Emmanuel appointed director of Trinidad Cement
03 October 2018Trinidad & Tobago: Trinidad Cement has appointed Claudia Emmanuel as a director of the company to fill a casual vacancy. Emmanuel will hold the position until the company’s next annual general meeting, whereupon she will be eligible for re-election.
Trinidad: Trinidad Cement’s revenue rose by 4% year-on-year to US$132m in the first half of 2018 from US$127m in the same period in 2017. Its profit nearly tripled to US$7.57m.
Jamaica: Cemex España, a subsidiary of Cemex, has agreed to lend Caribbean Cement US$102m to purchase assets mainly consisting of the Kiln 5 and Mill 5 processes at its plant at Rockfort plant Kingston. Any remaining funds will be used for ‘general corporate purposes.’ In May 2018 Caribbean Cement signed an agreement to buy plant equipment from its parent company Trinidad Cement for US$118m that was originally leased to it. Cemex owns a controlling stake in both companies.
Barbados: Trinidad Cement and its Barbadian subsidiary Arawak Cement have taken legal action against the Government of Barbados over allegedly breaking the Caribbean Community Single Market and Economy. The complaint relates to accusations that the country broke import duties on cement, according to Barbados Today. The government has been accused of reducing import tariffs to 5% from 60%.
Arawak Cement and competitor Rock Hard Cement have battled for the local market since the entry of the latter company in the market in 2015. Trinidad Cement has also taken action against Turkish cement importers previously.
Jamaica: Caribbean Cement has signed an agreement to buy plant equipment from its parent company Trinidad Cement. The US$118m deal includes kiln and mill equipment being used at Caribbean Cement’s Rockfort plant in Kingston. The equipment was previously leased to Caribbean Cement in 2010.