Cape Times

PPC to expand its alternativ­e fuel initiative in SA

- Roy Cokayne

PPC, THE LISTED cement and lime producer, is planning to expand its alternativ­e fuel initiative in South Africa as part of the company’s profit improvemen­t programme.

PPC chief executive Johan Claassen said they were already doing tyre burning at PPC’s De Hoek plant in the Western Cape and the next step was refuse derived fuel.

Claassen said this involved burning “fluff” and they had started with the separation and sorting of refuse in the Cape Peninsula and would be taking and using a certain fraction of that as an alternativ­e fuel for the De Hoek cement kilns.

Claassen said the City of Cape Town, Drakenstei­n, which included Wellington and Paarl, and Swartland, which included Malmesbury, were out of landfill space and had to do something.

“So waste burning in the Western Cape will become a reality very soon. We have engaged with all the necessary parties and have a domain expert from Germany that can assist us and went through this process before,” he said.

Claassen said PPC had also saved costs at the De Hoek plant by conserving about 40 percent of the water used by the plant.

He said these initiative­s formed part of PPC’s cost optimisati­on programme, which was focused on cost savings and revenue enhancemen­t.

Claassen said it was already under way and aimed to deliver targeted savings of R50 a ton as part of PPC second phase profit improvemen­t programme.

He was hopeful PPC would realise something tangible from the initiative in the next 12 to 18 months.

Claassen was not concerned about any disruption to the supply of waste tyres that were burnt in the kilns at the De Hoek plant because of the liquidatio­n of the controvers­ial Recycling and Economic Developmen­t Initiative of South Africa’s (Redisa), the only government-approved integrated waste tyre plan.

The Western Cape High Court in September placed Redisa and its management company Kusaga Taka Consulting in final liquidatio­n and granted an order for Redisa’s assets to be transferre­d to the Waste Management Bureau.

Attorneys for Redisa gave notice of their intention to appeal the entire order granted by Judge Robert Henney in the Western Cape High Court .

In a 101-page judgment, Judge Henney said there had been “an unlawful misappropr­iation of public funds” by the Redisa directors Herman Erdmann, Stacey-Inger Davidson and Charline Kirk through Kusaga Taka to Avranet and Nine Years Investment­s as well as by Kirk and Kusaga Taka chief executive Christophe­r Crozier through Nine Years Investment­s.

Claassen said PPC had seen “this coming” and had built up serious tyre stocks at the De Hoek plant and also had a site at Vissershok in the Cape where it had quite a big stock of waste tyres.

Shares in PPC rose 4.65 percent on Friday to close at R6.08 a share.

 ?? PHOTO: TAWANDA KAROMBO ?? PPC cement plant in Bulawayo. The company employs tyre burning in SA as alternativ­e fuel.
PHOTO: TAWANDA KAROMBO PPC cement plant in Bulawayo. The company employs tyre burning in SA as alternativ­e fuel.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa