Dangote Cement, Africa’s largest cement manufacturer, continued
to experience a slowdown in performance at home in Nigeria and other key
African markets such as Ethiopia and South Africa in the first half of
this year, but recorded remarkable improvement in Tanzania.
The
group’s half-year revenues declined by three per cent to $1.2 billion
from $1.3 billion during the same period in 2018, largely blamed on
lower volumes and net average prices in Nigeria.
The
cement maker’s pan-African operations posted a 2.7 per cent rise in
sales to 4.7 million tonnes, up from 4.6 million tonnes over the same
period in 2018. The total pan-African volumes represented 38.2 per cent
of group sales volumes.
But the group
operating profit declined by 15 per cent to $464.6 million, from $546.5
million in 2018, due to the depreciation of the Nigerian naira.
“Our
variable costs continue to be affected by foreign exchange effects as
well as higher fuel and distribution costs,” said Dangote Group chief
executive Joe Makoju.
Dangote,
however, tripled its market share in Tanzania to 22 per cent from seven
per cent last year, after resolving operational challenges that resulted
in a significant rise in sales
The company is emerging as a key beneficiary
of the fall of some of its regional competitors such as ARM Cement (Athi
River Mining) and Tanzania’s move to block cement imports from Kenya,
over contentions on the source of raw materials used in its
manufacturing.
In Tanzania, Dangote
Cement, which in September 2018 started running its Mtwara plant on gas
instead of coal, posted a 172 per cent rise in cement sales to 543,000
tonnes in the first half of 2019 compared with 200,000 tonnes in the
same period last year.
“We
saw a stronger performance in Tanzania, which is now running on gas
turbines. Our higher volumes were supported by higher prices across the
market as demand rose across the country, particularly the southern
region,” said Mr Makoju.
The switch
to gas was a significant turnaround in terms of saving costs and
uninterrupted production, with uptake driven by the government’s vast
investments in infrastructure projects that are driving construction
activity. These include the Dar es Salaam-Morogoro railway, the
Kenya-Tanzania railway, major road and bridge projects and commercial
housing.
In the first half of 2018,
Dangote was forced to suspend operations in its Mtwara plant due to high
cost of fuel for the diesel generators after the Tanzanian government
banned importation of coal from South Africa.
In
Ethiopia, electricity rationing and shortage of foreign currency
resulted in a decline in sales to 945,000 tonnes in the first half of
this year, from the 973,000 tonnes sold in the same period in 2018, with
its market share in the country stagnating at 21 per cent.
The
plant got only 50 per cent of the power normally needed for full
production, a scenario that significantly impacted both volumes and
margins.
“In general, the cement
market in Ethiopia is driven by demand for large government
infrastructure projects. However, shortages of foreign exchange are
impacting infrastructure projects as well as dampening general economic
activity,” said the company.
Dangote
is however optimistic that the rains which have begun to normalise water
levels in the country’s hydroelectric power cascade coupled by
improvement in transport logistics, increase in use of local coal and
the commissioning of a new cement bags factory could result in a rise in
sales in the second half.
Dangote
holds nearly 46 million tonnes capacity of cement across 10 countries in
Africa. Nigeria, where its production capacity stands at 29 million
tonnes, remains it flagship market, accounting for over 60 per cent of
sales.
***
TOUGH TIMES
Across the region, cement companies are experiencing tough times.
Kenya:
ARM is in administration while Bamburi Cement’s profit for the first
half of this year shrank substantially to $2.8 million from $11.4
million in 2018.
East Africa Portland Cement Company is on its knees.
Rwanda: Loss-making Cimerwa is already on the market, with the government, which owns 49 per cent stake, eager to sell it off
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