East African: Kenya-based East African Portland Cement Company (EAPCC) has announced plans for an international expansion into the Democratic Republic of Congo. The planned expansion will accompany continued capital expenditure investment in the company’s existing Athi River cement plant in Kenya over the five-year period up to 2028.

CEO Oliver Kirubai said that EAPCC expects ultimately to ‘outgrow the regional cement market.’

Greece: Titan Cement International stated in its preliminary results for 2022 that it expects to record Euro2.25bn in consolidated sales for the year. The figure corresponds to growth of 32% year-on-year from full-year consolidated sales of Euro1.71bn in 2021. The group's anticipated earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) are Euro330m, up by 20% year-on-year from Euro275m. Meanwhile, preliminary net debt fell by 12% year-on-year to Euro800m from Euro912m.

During the fourth quarter of 2022, Titan Cement International noted a 'significant improvement' in profitability quarter-on-quarter in its Southeast Europe and US regions. This came about partly due to a decline in electricity costs. The producer noted the success of its cost-saving actions in the area.

Pakistan: Power Cement has awarded a coal supply contract to Sindh Engro Coal Mining Company (SECMC) on a trial basis. The Dawn newspaper has reported that SECM's locally sourced coal may subsequently replace imported coal in cement production at Power Cement's Nooriabad cement plant in Sindh.

SECMC produces 3.8Mt/yr of coal from the Thar coalfield. It has an extraction capacity of 7.6Mt/yr, which it plans to increase by 61% to 12.2Mt/yr with a new expansion phase by June 2023. SECMC said that this will lower the price of its coal by 36% to US$27/t from US$42/t. Currently, only Afghanistan is exporting coal to Pakistan, at a price of US$166/t.

Thar coal has a relatively low heating value, including by comparison to Pakistani coal from the western provinces of Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

India: Sagar Cements recorded consolidated sales of US$197m during the first nine months of the 2023 Indian financial year, more than four times the US$44.6m that it recorded during the corresponding period of the 2022 financial year. Costs rose sharply during the period. Raw materials accounted for 45% of total costs. The producer spent US$32.1m on raw materials, up by more than a factor of four from US$6.54m. Sagar Cements made a nine-month net loss of US$11m, compared to a US$6.07m profit during the first nine months of the 2022 financial year.

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