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Global Cement and Concrete Association and China Cement Association to collaborate for cement decarbonisation

01 February 2024

World: The Global Cement and Concrete Association (GCCA) has signed a new agreement with the China Cement Association (CCA). The agreement constitutes an historic ‘partnership pledge’ to accelerate cement decarbonisation globally in 2024 – 2026. The partners says that their collaboration will contribute to the development and launch of the upcoming China Cement Carbon Neutrality Roadmap. Equipment supplier Sinoma International Engineering and the European Cement Research Academy (ECRA) will also help to develop the roadmap. The GCCA previously launched its own global net zero roadmap in 2021. Together, GCCA and CCA members account for 90% of global cement production in capacity terms.

GCCA CEO Thomas Guillot, said “The world needs leadership and collaboration like never before, especially on addressing the key issue of our time, climate change. This agreement between the China industry and the global industry is a signal to the world that we stand ready to deliver the essential decarbonised building materials that our planet needs. Cement and concrete enable the key infrastructure, thriving and resilient communities, clean water, safe homes and the shift to clean energy that are essential to a future sustainable world.”

CCA Executive president Kong Xiangzhong said “This important agreement marks a win-win cooperation, and shows where we can collaborate effectively to bring insights, technical know-how and greater focus to our shared decarbonisation mission. I am sure this will create a mutually-beneficial and long-term partnership that will be crucial in building a more sustainable world.”

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • US
  • Global Cement and Concrete Association
  • China Cement Association
  • Partnership
  • CO2
  • Emissions
  • reduction
  • policy
  • lobbying
  • Roadmap
  • Strategy
  • net zero
  • Sinoma International Engineering
  • China National Building Material
  • Sustainability
  • GCW645

Tokuyama Corporation’s cement business grows sales in first nine months of 2024 financial year

01 February 2024

Japan: Tokuyama Corporation reported sales of US$1.7bn in the first nine months of the 2024 financial year. This represents a 3.3% year-on-year drop from nine-month levels in the previous financial year. The company sold 2.42Mt of cement, and exported 460,000t (19%) of this to foreign markets. Tokuyama Corporation now expects to sell 3.2Mt of cement and export 600,000t in the full 2024 financial year. As a result, the company’s cement business contributed US$345m in sales in the first nine months of the financial year, up by 16% year-on-year.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • Japan
  • Tokuyama Corporation
  • Results
  • Export
  • volumes
  • GCW645

United States Geological Survey reports drop in US cement production in 2023

01 February 2024

US: US cement plants produced 91Mt of cement in 2023, according to data from the United States Geological Survey (USGS). This corresponds to a year-on-year decline of 2.2% from 93Mt in 2022. The figure places the US in fourth globally in cement production volumes, behind China with 2.1Bnt (in line with 2022 levels), India with 410Mt (up by 7.9% year-on-year) and Vietnam with 110Mt (down by 8.3%).

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • US
  • United States Geological Survey
  • volumes
  • data
  • China
  • India
  • Vietnam
  • Production
  • GCW645

Enforcement Directorate searches The India Cements locations

01 February 2024

India: The Indian Enforcement Directorate has conducted searches at locations associated with The India Cements. The directorate is seeking evidence of alleged violations of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA). Business Today Online News has reported that the current scope of suspected violations totals US$30 – 36m.

India Cements has yet to comment on the investigation.

Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • India
  • India Cements
  • Raid
  • Investigation
  • Enforcement Directorate
  • currency
  • Finance
  • Fraud
  • allegations
  • GCW645

FLSmidth considers the future

Written by David Perilli, Global Cement
31 January 2024

There have been two major announcements in the cement sector this week. The first was that Holcim is preparing to divest its business in the US via a spin-off and full capital market separation. The second was that FLSmidth is thinking about selling its cement equipment business. Both stories are huge so we will cover them both. This week we will focus on FLSmidth and Holcim will follow next time.

Both news stories came as something of a shock. Yet FLSmidth’s plans were not surprising given the divestment of MAAG gears and drives business earlier in January 2024 and several years of tough trading conditions in the sector generally. Yet, as one commentator on the Global Cement LinkedIn Group put it, it feels like “the end of an era.”

First a little history. FLSmidth has been in business for over 140 years and has been indelibly linked to the cement market throughout this time. Its first big cement order was in 1887, it built its own plant in Aalborg in 1889 and it started selling rotary kilns in 1899. By 1957, at the time of its 75th anniversary, it was estimated that 40% of the world’s cement was manufactured in equipment supplied by FLSmidth. Many other advancements and milestones followed but signs of the modern business’ focus on mining can be detected in the acquisition of US-based Fuller Company in 1990, the sale of Aalborg Portland in 2002 and the purchase of ThyssenKrupp Industrial Solutions’ mining business in 2021.

FLSmidth described its reasoning for a potential divestment of its cement business and focusing on mining as follows: “our industries, and in turn, the appropriate operating models which best serve them, have diverged. Consequently, combining our two organisations under one ownership is now forcing more operational friction than benefit.” It took pains to state that it hopes to sell its cement business in one piece whereupon it can continue to grow under new ownership and “maximise its full potential.”

FLSmidth’s strategy for selling its cement equipment business appears to have taken the form of separating out the cement business, making it look as strong as possible and then publicly announcing that it is “exploring divestment options.” This is different from many other corporate divestments that only become public once a deal with a prospective buyer has been secured. FLSmidth has been preparing for a potential divestment of the division internally through its ‘pure play’ strategies and focusing more recently on product, services and technology rather than project risks. It said that the MAAG sale had shown it that there was interest in buying the cement business. However, no potential buyers have been disclosed at this time. In a conference call the company said that it was hoping for five to 10 interested parties and it would expect these to be either industrial buyers or financial entities.

One of the callers homed in on the attempts by ThyssenKrupp to sell the cement division of its subsidiary ThyssenKrupp Industrial Solutions (TKIS) in 2020 following a restructuring drive. It changed its mind in 2021 and ended up selling its mining division to FLSmidth instead. In response to any comparison, FLSmidth asserted that it was preparing to sell a significantly different asset to TKIS, not least due to its careful steering away from project-based risk.

The wider business backdrop to this decision has been the rise of the Chinese cement sector since the late 1990s, persistent global production overcapacity, the setting of net zero CO2 emission targets globally and, more recently, logistic and economic shocks arising from the Covid-19 pandemic and geopolitical events. New cement production line projects are now frequently managed by China-based equipment suppliers in many territories, with the exception of North America. It is worth noting here that some of the largest China-based cement equipment suppliers are subsidiaries of the government. The Chinese government has also supported the construction of new plants outside its borders through its Belt and Road initiative. Protectionist investment policies implemented by western governments to support industry transitioning to net zero is in part a response to this in the general economy. Cement equipment suppliers from outside of China can and do build lines on a regular basis but they tend to concentrate on parts of plants, such as mills, or specific technologies and services. FLSmidth is a good example of this transition with its renewed focus on the green transition.

The decision by FLSmidth to consider selling its cement business marks another sign that the cement industry is changing. The transition to net zero puts Europe-based suppliers in a good position given that the region is currently leading with carbon capture projects. A retrofit boom for cement plants (and customers) being made to pay for CO2 emissions could change the dynamic for the cement equipment sector as the focus shifts from building kilns to capturing CO2. And companies like FLSmidth are well placed to benefit from this. Then again it may just end up being business as usual. Either way, any eventual change in the ownership of FLSmidth’s cement division does indeed mark the end of an era.

Next week: Holcim’s plans in the US

Published in Analysis
Tagged under
  • Denmark
  • FLSmidth
  • FLSmidth Cement
  • GCW644
  • Divestments
  • FLSmidth MAAG Gear
  • Mining
  • Aalborg Portland
  • ThyssenKrupp Industrial Solutions
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