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Latvia: Schwenk Cement Latvija has inaugurated a carbon capture test base at the Brocēni cement plant, according to a post on Linkedin by the producer. Throughout 2025, several technologies will be tested at the site to determine the best solution for Brocēni and Schwenk’s other plants. The Broceni carbon capture and storage (CCS) project aims to capture 800,000t/yr of CO₂. The event was attended by Latvian prime minister Evika Silina, German embassy representative Heike Janče and staff members from Schwenk Latvija.
The final investment decision is planned for 2027, with completion in 2030. Schwenk said the project will strengthen exports to Estonia, Finland and Sweden and establish a regional value chain for low-CO₂ cement.
Türkiye: Limak Çimento will expand the solar power plant under construction in Kurtalan, Siirt, to meet the electricity demands of its cement plant, according to Energy Diary. The project, divided into five units, will increase its capacity from 9.91MW to 15.9MW with the addition of 6MW. The project site will increase from 109,000m² to 241,000m². The expansion will reportedly employ 10 people during construction and five in the operation phase.
Portugal: Cement consumption reached 1.97Mt in the first half of 2025, down by 2.2% year-on-year, according to the construction industry association AICCOPN. In the same period, permits issued for construction and rehabilitation of residential buildings rose by 14% to 10,262. The number of licensed new housing units saw a ‘significant increase’ of 26%, totalling 20,613 new dwellings.
India: Andhra Cements has commissioned a 6MW solar power plant at its cement plant in Palnadu district, Andhra Pradesh, according to India Infoline. The project forms part of the company’s initiative to reduce reliance on conventional energy sources and promote sustainable operations.
Ukraine/Ireland: Divinereach, a company led by Hyundai Ireland chair Eugene O’Reilly, has bought a 25% stake in Dyckerhoff Ukraine from CRH, according to Business Post Ireland. The sale was a condition of CRH’s 2024 acquisition of Dyckerhoff from Italy-based Buzzi.
Local competitor Kovalska has opposed the Dyckerhoff acquisition, arguing it created a duopoly with CemIn West and gave CRH a 46% market share, exceeding limits under Ukrainian and EU monopoly law.
CRH has defended its position, saying the acquisition was completed in accordance with accepted international practice, in full compliance with all legislative requirements and with the approval of the Antimonopoly Committee of Ukraine (AMCU).
CRH said “While we are monitoring the legal challenge to the AMCU approval in Ukraine... we are focused on investing in our businesses and supporting our employees.”
Kovalska plans to appeal the AMCU’s approval of the acquisition to the Ukrainian supreme court in September 2025.