Quarry Southern Africa November 2018 | Page 8

AFRICAN NEWS Lafarge Zimbabwe says that it is able to supply the market with cement following a shortage. In a statement the subsidiary of LafargeHolcim said that the recent surge in demand was ‘temporary’ and that, overall, the situation was a ‘positive signal of economic growth,’ according to the Chronicle newspaper. It says that the situation might be attributable to a rise in mortgage finance as well as improved disposable income following a successful tobacco and maize farming season on the back of the Command Agriculture Programme. Cement prices have reportedly risen by over 50% due to the shortage. Producers have blamed her situation on technical problems following maintenance works at their plants. They have also ruled out No Zim problems Lafarge Zimbabwe believes it can supply the market, notwithstanding shortages. any further increases in prices. Despite the cement shortage they have warned against trading cement on the black market.  Congolese cement producers wary of tax rise Republic of Congo cement producers have expressed concerns about government plans to increase VAT on cement to 18% from 5%. Cement prices are expected to rise as manufacturers pass the extra cost on to consumers, according to the Central African Information Agency. An industry source quoted by the agency says that local cement plants are doing badly due to a capacity utilisation rate of 10 to 20%. The country has five cement plants with a production capacity of 3.2Mt/ yr but cement consumption was only 0.7Mt in 2017.  Cement price rises imminent in Republic of Congo. Most wrongly labelled cement is counterfeit Ukrcement, the Ukrainian cement association, has found in a study that over 80% of cement with the wrong labelling was counterfeit. The research was conducted on 50 cement bags for the consumer 8_QUARRY SA| NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2018 market, according to Interfax. Fully 82% of cement proved to be counterfeit, over 50% of the samples were below the declared weight and 56% had weaker strength and did not comply with the country’s national standard for minimum compressive strength. The association said that the risks of using counterfeit cement vary from loss of time and revenue in smaller projects to a direct threat to human life in larger projects such as high-rise buildings. Local regulations require that cement bags include five items: the name of the producer, the conventional designation of cement, the designation of the normative document, the net weight and a conformity mark. 