Exploration, mining expected to grow in importance for cement producer PPC

Exploration, mining expected to grow in importance for cement producer PPC

The medium-term game plan of African cement producer PPC is to find new resources needed by its operations, which will probably require it to engage in some form of exploration and eventual mining close to where urban development is expected in Africa.

Over time, the resources side of the business is expected to become more critical as companies strive to optimise profits by minimising limestone variability. The JSE-listed PPC - which currently has nine cement factories in South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe and most recently Rwanda, which together have a production capacity of 8.6-million tonnes of cement products a year - already has a mining competence within its own mining department.

Mined materials including limestone, gypsum and coal are required in the production of cement and PPC’s target is to more than double the size of its business every ten years. It is scheduled to open a cement plant in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) before year-end and another in Ethiopia in the second calendar quarter of 2017.

Having served as a CEO of Trafigura Mining and Anvil Mining and COO of Metorex, Castle has extensive mining experience and will not shy away from mining, for example, a coal deposit if it happens to be right near where a company’s limestone deposit is located.

The company under his stewardship would be open to the possibility of mining the two together and even consider selling coal externally, if it made business sense. Cement is fundamentally a limestone-based product and foremost in Africa is understanding where the market is, or will be in the future, and where the limestone is, along with sources of coal and gypsum.

While gypsum costs are quite a significant portion of PPC’s Rwanda cost base because of its having to be imported, its cost in the South African context is negligible because of local availability. With logistics a significant portion of the cost base, the closer inputs are to the market, the better.

PPC’s target of more than doubling in size every ten years is based on the continent’s world-leading rate of urbanisation and the projection that the population of Africa will double by 2050. Calculations point to Africa needing to accommodate another 900-million urban dwellers in the next 34 years and PPC foresees immense expenditure on infrastructure accompanying this significant urbanisation and population growth.

The company is leveraging off its South African domicile and skills base to focus far more strongly on Africa, for which it is tailoring competencies for each region entered. It also regards indigenisation in all of its African businesses as a given. Africa is seen as providing significant scope to broaden offerings considerably, even into retail. For example, transferring bagged cement to a warehouse in an urban environment bereft of retail infrastructure would put the company in a position to sell directly to the public, just as the operational need of cement plants to burn materials may present waste management opportunities.

“It’s no longer just about a cement volume expansion. There are related businesses that we’d look at as well, so doubling might mean different things to us than just pure cement volume doubling, but it tells you that we have to be working on a pipeline around new businesses, new cement factories in Africa, either leveraging off what we’ve got or finding new regions,” Castle commented.

The new head of the 124-year-old, 3 000-employee PPC, which has assets worth R20-billion, intends to position its cement factories close to the next African cities. While its new $170-million 51%-owned 600 000 t/y cement plant in Rwanda ramps up, other projects that will help to add some 50% to South African volumes are:

• the $85-million, 700 000 t/y mill that PPC’s 70% Zimbabwean subsidiary is scheduled to commission at the end of this year;

• the large $280-million, 69%-owned cement project west of Kinshasa, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is scheduled to come on stream at the end of this year; and

• the new $170-million to $180-million 31%-owned cement project in Ethiopia, where work is scheduled for commissioning in the second calendar quarter of 2017.

PPC is also expanding its operations in existing markets and forming part of its channel management strategy for South Africa – where it also produces aggregates, metallurgical-grade lime, burnt dolomite and limestone – are the acquisitions of Safika Cement and Pronto Readymix, including Ulula Ash. PPC also intends to conclude an asset-for-shares agreement with 3Q Mahuma to progress further the company’s ready mix channel management strategy.