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Kenya: The Competition Authority of Kenya has granted China-based Zou Fengqi and Oman-based Raysut Cement exemption from regulatory approval on a recent application in line with competition guidelines. The Business Daily newspaper has reported that the application stated that Zou Fengqi plans to acquire a 60% stake in Raysut Cement’s business in East Africa.
Raysut Cement operates grinding plants in Mogadishu, Somalia and Somaliland.
China: Sinoma International Engineering has signed a deal worth US$300m to build a new integrated cement plant for Guangxi Jinxiang Cement. The contract includes two 6000t/day clinker production lines, from raw material crushing to packaging, and a 6Mt/yr aggregate line. The project is located in Dashan Village near Shilong Town, Xiangzhou County in Guangxi region. It is expected to be completed by mid-2022.
Pakistan: Lucky Cement and China-based China Sinoma Energy Conservation have signed a deal to upgrade the waste heat recovery (WHR) units on both production lines at the integrated Pezu cement plant. When the project is completed it will increase the output to 14MW from 10MW at present. No value for the order has been disclosed. Sinoma supplied the plant’s original WHR units in 2017.
Dzata Cement bagging plant to open in mid-2021 12 May 2021
Ghana: Dzata Cement, a 1.2Mt/yr bagging plant based in Tema, plans to start commercial production by June 2021. The unit cost US$100m and includes a two line bagging and packaging equipment supplied by Germany-based Haver & Boecker, according to the Ghana News Agency. It will use imported cement. Proposed later phases at the site will see an upgrade in bagging operations to 2.4Mt/yr and the eventual installation of two 3Mt/yr vertical roller mills. As a safeguard against surges of cement imports the government has also introduced new export and import legislation requiring licenses for imports from outside the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) region.
The plant’s founder Ibrahim Mahama is the brother of former Ghanian president John Dramani Mahama. In November 2020 the Ghana News Agency reported that Kofi Amoabeng, the former chief executive officer of UT Bank, said that loans made to companies including Dzata Cement had contributed to the bank being declared insolvent in 2017.
US: Titan America, part of Greece-based Titan Group, has launched ProAsh and EcoTherm. Both products are made from ash reclaimed from landfill and can be used in both cement and concrete production. Titan America subsidiary Separation Technologies produces the materials at its Brunner Island reclaimed ash drying and electrostatic separation plant in Pennsylvania.
President and chief executive officer Bill Zarkalis said, “This breakthrough achievement represents Titan America’s commitment to the reduction of CO2 through innovation as we plan to deploy this technology across the construction material sector.” He added “By harnessing the power of this technology, Separation Technologies is utilising a revolutionary beneficiation process that is capable of converting reclaimed ash from ash basins in an efficient manner. The result is a high-grade, low carbon construction product.”