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Sierra Leone: IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, has announced a US$24m financing package for MACCEM Industries to build and operate a new cement grinding plant in Freetown. The project aims to reduce Sierra Leone’s reliance on cement imports, improve access to locally produced building materials and create new jobs. The package includes a US$12m loan from IFC’s own account and an additional US$12m from the IDA20 IFC-MIGA Private Sector Window Blended Finance Facility. The new plant has a planned capacity of 657,000t/yr and is expected to meet up to 65% of the country’s domestic cement demand. It will also reportedly integrate solar energy into its operations.

Ahmad Mackie, CEO of Maccem Industries, said “Together we are building the country’s first cement grinding plant in four decades, a project that will reduce import dependency, create jobs, empower local businesses, and set a stronger foundation for sustainable and inclusive growth.”

Abdu Muwonge, World Bank Group joint country representative in Sierra Leone, added “IFC’s partnership with MACCEM will support the development of housing and vital infrastructure such as roads, housing, water systems and energy projects.”

India: Penna Cement Industries, a subsidiary of Ambuja Cements, has commissioned a 2Mt/yr brownfield expansion of its cement grinding unit in Krishnapatnam, Andhra Pradesh. With this commissioning, Ambuja Cement’s consolidated cement capacity has risen to 106.45Mt/yr.

Belarus: The country’s cement sector is intensifying efforts to use refuse-derived fuel (RDF) in cement production, according to the state information agency Belarus Telegraph Agency.

Belarusian Cement Company introduced an RDF processing line in 2021 at OAO Krasnoselskstroymaterialy in Grodno Oblast, enabling full incineration of RDF supplied by local waste-processing plants. Contracts are reportedly already in place with RDF suppliers for 25,000t of the fuel to be delivered by the end of 2025.

In September 2025, industrial trials of RDF made by Minsk-based Ekores will begin. If successful, shipments from the company could double from 15,000t to 30,000t, raising total RDF use to 40,000t in the final quarter of 2025.

Plans are also underway to expand RDF infrastructure in 2026, with a regional municipal waste management and RDF production complex under construction near Volkovysk.

Saudi Arabia: Southern Province Cement announced that its memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Yanbu Cement, aimed at assessing the feasibility of a potential merger, has expired without conclusion. The MoU was first signed in June 2024 and extended in June 2025 for an additional three months. That extension lapsed on 22 September 2025, Southern Province Cement said in a filing to the Saudi Stock Exchange.

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