Cement consumption in the first seven months defied effects of
the coronavirus pandemic pointing to stable activity in the construction
sector despite the restrictions imposed in March to curb spread of the
disease.
Data from the Kenya National Bureau of
Statistics (KNBS) show that consumption rose 4.5 percent to 3.59 million
tonnes in the period from 3.44 million tonnes posted first seven months
of last year.
The sector remained relatively
unaffected by restrictions on movement into and out Nairobi and Mombasa,
dusk to dawn curfew and bans on public gatherings that hit most sectors
of the economy.
Cement consumption rose month-on-month
from April before it fell in July when Kenya announced phased
re-opening of the country including resuming movement into and out of
Nairobi and Mombasa.
“Following the lifting of the
cessation of movement order we have seen a slight recovery of up to 10
percent largely driven by sales beyond the Nairobi Metropolitan area…all
indicators are positive that a steady recovery will be achieved in the
medium term,” Savannah Cement chief executive Ronald Ndegwa said
Consumption was 551,914 tonnes in March, fell to 505,958 tonnes
in April and rose to 506,728 tonnes and 508,298 in May and June,
respectively.
But cement use in the three months to
June during the peak of the restrictions, remained higher compared to
the same period last year.
This contrasts with other
indicator in the property market like rent, home prices and land
costs—which have been subdued by the reduced economic activities in the
wake of the pandemic.
Rent prices in Nairobi and the
neighbouring counties of Kiambu, Kajiado and Machakos dropped 0.2
percent in the three months to June compared to a 3.6 percent growth in a
similar period last year.
HassConsult, which conducts a
quarterly property pricing index in Kenya linked the fall to an
oversupply of homes amid reduced demand related to the Covid-19 economic
fallout.
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