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Displaying items by tag: VICEM
Vietnamese industry sending mixed messages
25 July 2012Vietnam: The state-run Vietnam Cement Industry Corporation (VICEM) has announced that it made a pre-tax profit of US$15.9m in the first half of 2012, a 73% year-on-year rise compared to the first half of 2011 and 44% of its whole-year target. Howver, its revenues fell by 1.2% year-on-year to US$682m during the same period.
Vicem reports that it sold 9.71Mt of cement and clinker in the first half of 2012, a 1.4% drop compared to the same period of 2011. Of the total 0.65Mt was exported, a 1.5% increase. Vicem produced 7.45Mt/yr of cement and 7.08Mt/yr of clinker between January and June 2012.
Meanwhile, a city authority has called a halt to the construction of a new cement plant amid continued overcapacity in Vietnam. Kinh Bac City Development Share Holding Corp (KBC) has received approval from authorities from the central province of Nghe An to withdraw from a cement plant project worth of hundreds of millions of US Dollars.
Construction of the Saigon-Tan Ky plant, which was planned to have a designed capacity of 5Mt/yr, was started on 19 May 2010 and it was expected to be developed in two phases. The production capacity for the first phase was projected to be 2500t/day (0.95Mt/yr). Investment for the first phase was proposed at US$71.8m. Local media has reported that the support structures for the three kiln plant have not yet been completed.
Vietnam had around 2.8Mt of cement in inventories by the end of June 2012 but the figure is expected to rise to as much as 6Mt by the end of the year. Local media reports that the overcapacity has been brought about through the 'unplanned construction of cement plants' in recent years.
Vietnam: Vietnam's Ministry of Construction has proposed the creation of an association for cement and clinker exporters to curb 'unhealthy' competition among them. The proposal has been sent to the prime minister for approval.
In its proposal the ministry said that Vietnam's cement and clinker exports have been 'badly affected' because some companies cut export prices to 'unfairly' compete with the rest. At present Vietnam has eight cement and clinker exporters. Six, Vicem, Ha Long, Thang Long, Cam Pha, The Vissai and Cong Thanh, are domestic. The remaining two, Chinfon and Phuc Son, are joint venture companies.
The ministry has called on local cement companies to cooperate rather than undercut each other in order to liquidate their large inventories through exports. The inventories are the biggest challenge facing the industry, it said. Exporting is considered a temporary measure to deal with the rising inventories which were caused by frozen real estate market and unplanned construction of cement factories nationwide.
Vietnam held around 2.8Mt of cement in inventories at the end of June 2012. The figure is expected to rise to 6Mt by the end of 2012, an increase of 23% on year-on-year.
Vietnam overcapacity to worsen in 2012
31 January 2012Vietnam: The Vietnamese cement industry continues to suffer the effects of overcapacity and is struggling to export enough cement. The industry faced many difficulties in 2011, in part due to its stagnant real estate market. In 2012, however, eight new cement plants will go into operation with a combined capacity of 6.9Mt/yr. This will bring the total capacity of the country to 73Mt/yr, worsening the oversupply situation.
According to the Vietnamese Cement Association, the total demand for cement in 2012 will be about 60Mt/yr, of which 53Mt/yr will be for domestic consumption. Currently cement is exported to China, India and a number of Asia Pacific nations. Africa is also becoming a promising market. While China is reporting soaring consumption, India itself is facing overcapacity as demand weakens, threatening this export market for Vietnam.
Vietnam currently faces difficulty in supplying cement overseas. Its domestic infrastructure is poor and input costs, like those around the world, are increasing. There is also a poor perception of Vietnamese cement exports, which may be damaging trade.