A Royal Honour for John King Chains
UK: John King Chains has been honoured with a prestigious King’s Award for Enterprise in International Trade - its first King’s Award, following a Queen’s Award in 2020.
The award was officially announced on Tuesday 6 May 2025, and John King Chains is delighted to be one of just 197 organisations nationally recognised this year for outstanding achievement.
Founded in 1926 and headquartered in Sherburn-in-Elmet, North Yorkshire, John King Chains has built a proud legacy of engineering excellence. Now a fifth-generation family-owned manufacturer, the company continues to experience strong international growth, supported by ongoing investment in its people and British manufacturing facilities.
Managing Director William Wadsworth commented:
"Receiving the King’s Award is a truly proud moment for everyone at John King Chains, and we are honoured to receive this prestigious accolade, particularly as the company approaches its 100-year anniversary next year of British manufacturing. It reflects the incredible effort our team puts in every day to deliver world-class products and services to our international customer base."
International markets have been a key driver of growth for John King Chains group, with the company continuing to achieve year-on-year expansion. Today, operations span four continents, enabling the business to better serve customers worldwide.
Continued investment in people, technology and UK manufacturing facilities has been fundamental to John King Chains' international success. As the company prepares to celebrate its centenary, winning the King’s Award marks a powerful milestone that highlights what can be achieved through hard work, innovation and dedication.
Now in its 59th year, the King’s Awards for Enterprise are the United Kingdom’s most prestigious business accolades and a globally recognised mark of excellence, making this achievement a proud moment in John King Chains' history and a testament to the commitment and passion of its entire team.
Brazilian cement sales down in April 2025
Brazil: Cement sales fell by 3% year-on-year in April 2025 to 5.2Mt, according to preliminary data from the National Cement Industry Union (SNIC). However, sales for the first four months of 2025 rose by 4% year-on-year. Sales per business day averaged 237,000t in April 2025, down by 4% from March 2025 but up by 6% from April 2024. In the period of January - April 2025, sales-per-day grew by 6.5% year-on-year.
Confidence in construction fell to its lowest level since March 2022 amid high interest rates, rising defaults and household debt. Construction firms have also reportedly cited concerns over labour shortages and reduced real estate inventories. The sector remains moderately optimistic, supported by housing and infrastructure projects.
Italy: Cementir reported revenues of €368m in the first quarter of 2025, down slightly from 2024. The company said this was despite the reduction in sales volumes in many regions and negative currency exchange effects in Egypt and Türkiye. Earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) also fell slightly to €66.4m from €66.5m. Profit before tax dropped by 48% year-on-year to €30.3m from €56.7m previously.
Cement and clinker sales declined by 6% to 2.24Mt, due to the Turkish government’s ban on exports to Israel active from the second quarter of 2024, as well as the general decline in the ‘main geographical areas’, with the exception of Malaysia, Egypt and China. Ready-mixed concrete volumes rose by 2%, while aggregates remained stable.
Chair and CEO Francesco Caltagirone said “Notwithstanding a modest reduction in cement sales volumes, group revenues for the first quarter of 2025 are in line with the same period of last year, as is EBITDA, which at constant exchange rates would instead have grown by 7.5% over 2024. Despite the current phase of significant geopolitical and trade uncertainty, we are keeping our industrial targets unchanged and continue on our decarbonisation path.”
US: The US Department of Energy may end the Industrial Demonstrations Program that aims to decarbonise hard-to-abate industries like cement, placing up to US$6bn in federal grants at risk, according to Canary Media. This includes an eventual US$500m in Heidelberg Materials North America’s Mitchell cement plant carbon capture project in Indiana. The project is reportedly at risk after 'significant' staff cuts at the Department of Energy.
The senior vice president of sustainability and public affairs for Heidelberg Materials North America, David Perkins, said that the company was ‘uncertain’ and that ‘coordination and communications [had] changed’. He added that the company is still submitting reports for the grant to the Department of Energy and exploring alternative funding sources.
France: Hoffmann Green Cement Technologies has formed a strategic partnership with paper mill Norske Skog Golbey to integrate ash from paper residue incineration into its clinker-free cement. The partners have been collaborating since January 2024 and the first shipment of paper ash for large-scale use was sent in May 2025, after successful testing.
New solar park for Holcim Magyarorszag
Hungary: ID Energy Group inaugurated a 28.5MW solar park at Holcim Magyarorszag's cement plant in Kiralyegyhaza on 12 May 2025. The new facility will supply around 30% of the plant’s electricity needs and was built under a power purchase agreement, according to MTI news.
India: Shree Cement has secured mining rights for a limestone quarry spanning 912 hectares. The reserve has a capacity of 211Mt and is situated in Jaisalmer District, Rajasthan.
Iraq: Kurdistan Region prime minister Masrour Barzani will inaugurate the Dabin cement plant and power station in Erbil Governorate today, 12 May 2025, according to Kurdistan24 news. The foundation stone was laid nearly two years ago, on 22 June 2023.
The project spans 212,000m² and was built by China Power Investment Corporation. It includes a 6300t/day capacity cement plant and a 52MW power station, intended to both support the energy needs of the plant and feed into the broader grid to alleviate strain on regional electricity supplies. A limestone quarry 1km away from the plant supplies the limestone for production, where geological surveys have reportedly confirmed reserves of 150Mt, sufficient to sustain operations for at least 50 years.
Raw material is transported to the plant using a 1400t/hr capacity industrial crusher. The processed material is stored in four 10,000t silos, each 18m in diameter and 56m tall.
Iraq: IVI Holding has signed a US$240m engineering, procurement and construction contract with Sinoma Overseas to build a new 6000t/day cement plant in Al-Muthanna Province.
The agreement was signed in Dubai on 9 May 2025 by IVI Holding chair Hussein Shamara and Sinoma Overseas chair Linhe Zhu.
The project forms part of the Iraqi government’s US$1.17bn industrial programme for Muthanna announced in April 2025.
Bolivia: Empresa Pública de Cementos Bolivia (ECEBOL) will begin exporting 12,500t/month of clinker to Mexico from June or July 2025, following the finalisation of a supply contract in late May 2025, according to Ahora El Pueblo newspaper.
Technical manager Aldo Olivera said that the deal will be Ecebol’s first clinker export contract, and that negotiations have been underway for several months. Oliviera said that the company hoped to achieve between US$7m - 8m over the course of the contract.