Two
Chinese firms, Sinoma and CITIC Heavy Industries, have agreed deals
totalling $733m to produce cement in Nigeria and Myanmar, respectively,
as they expand in emerging markets overseas.
Reuters reported that Sinoma
International Engineering Company Limited, a unit of China National
Materials Company Limited, signed a $536m contract with Nigeria’s
Dangote Cement Plc, Sinoma and National Materials said in separate
statements on Thursday.
Sinoma and Dangote, owned by Nigerian
billionaire, Aliko Dangote, who is Africa’s richest man, will be
building two clinker cement production lines, each with a daily capacity
of 6,000 tonnes.
Meanwhile, CITIC Heavy Industries is
collaborating in Myanmar with a unit of Siam Cement Group, Mawlamyine
Cement Limited, on a cement production facility with a capacity of 5,000
tonnes per day, it said in a statement.
“The signing of the project and a smooth
implementation will have a positive impact on the company’s future
operations,” CITIC Heavy said.
“It will also further develop the
company’s presence in the southeast Asian cement market, giving a boost
to our financial results.”
The project, worth $197m, follows a
similar contract that CITIC Heavy and Thailand’s Siam Cement signed in
May to build a cement production line in Cambodia, CITIC said in the
filing on the Shanghai stock exchange.
In November, China Machinery Engineering
Corporation entered a $236m agreement with Kar Group for a 6,000
tonne-per-day cement plant project in Iraq.
The Thursday announcements came after the China and Hong Kong markets closed.
Sinoma’s shares ended 0.12 per cent lower
at 8.35 yuan, while CITIC Heavy’s stock closed 0.29 per cent higher at
3.49 yuan, compared with the Shanghai composite index’s 0.06 per cent
fall.
China National’s shares finished 0.57 per cent lower at HK$1.75, roughly in line with the Hang Seng Index’s 0.51 per cent fall.
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