Bangladesh: The high rate of the US Dollar against the Bangladeshi Taka is forcing local cement producers to raise their prices despite an increase in imports of volumes of raw materials. The country imported 5.12Mt of clinker, granulated slag, limestone, gypsum and fly ash in July and August 2022, a rise of 34% year-on-year, according to the Daily Star newspaper. Golam Kibria, the general manager of Premier Cement, said that the negative currency exchange effect was the main cause of local price rises for cement since the cost of raw materials on international markets had remained stable in recent months.

The country imported 36.1Mt/yr of raw materials for cement production in the 2021 – 2022 financial year. These materials mostly came from Thailand, Vietnam and China through ports in Chattogram and Mongla. This compares to imports of 16.8Mt in the 2017 – 2018 financial year.

Australia: BGC has cancelled its latest attempt to sell the company, blaming the decision on labour shortages and supply chain disruption. It said it had received “very strong interest from a range of parties” but had made the decision based on poor market conditions, according to the West Australian newspaper. A shortage of skilled tradespersons in West Australia is negatively affecting the local home construction sector and reducing BGC’s value consequently. A second attempt to sell the company started in April 2022 with Macquarie Capital appointed to run the process. The company plans resume its sale in 2023 when market conditions have improved.

China: Sichuan Yadong Cement’s plant in Sichuan has restarted production following a suspension of electricity to industrial users due to a heat wave. The local authorities stopped supplying industrial plants in late August 2022. The subsidiary of Taiwan-based Asia Cement Corporation also reduced staff levels at the plant to cope with the extreme weather event.

Mexico: Cooperativa la Cruz Azul’s Tula cement plant in Hidalgo has agreed with the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) that electricity supplies will restored no later than 7 September 2022. Federico Sarabia, cooperative chair and leader of a dissident group claiming to own the plant, said that the plant has made losses of over US$15m due to the outage, according to the El Sol de la Laguna newspaper. The electricity supply to the site was reportedly cut in mid-August 2022 at the request of Víctor Manuel Velázquez, the head of the board of directors of the group.

State police intervened during a confrontation between rival groups for control of the Tula cement plant in late July 2022. The plant is the sole remaining Cruz Azul unit still reportedly controlled by former company director Guillermo ‘Billy’ Álvarez and his associates. The rest of the company is under the command of Cruz Azul’s directors José Antonio Marín and Víctor Manuel Velázquez. This group started asserting legal control of the cooperative’s cement plants in Puebla and Aguascalientes from mid-2020.

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