Daily Dispatch

PPC seek imposition of tariffs to curb cement imports

- SISEKO NJOBENI

Listed cement producer PPC is lobbying government body Internatio­nal Trade Administra­tion Commission (Itac) for the imposition of tariffs to curb the influx of cement imports.

For PPC, the cement imports, which jumped 80% between January and November 2018, worsened the subdued consumer environmen­t and gloomy constructi­on sector. The increase comes on the back of a 71% increase in imported cement in the six months to endSeptemb­er 2018.

The company said the majority of the cement imports were from Vietnam, China and Pakistan.

“PPC is lobbying for appropriat­e tariffs for imports for all countries, which will level the playing field. Currently, tariffs are only levied on cement imports from Pakistan. Furthermor­e, considerin­g the current muted economic environmen­t, a total ban would be appropriat­e,” PPC said in a statement.

The company pointed to over-capacity in the local market, saying current capacity was about 18m tons a year, compared to a demand of approximat­ely 14m tons a year.

PPC said imports into Cape Town increased by 48% to about 209,000 tons. This, however, was still substantia­lly lower than the imports into Durban which increased by 84%.

On Tuesday, PPC said in the nine months to end-December 2018 cement volumes slumped between 2% and 3% “against the backdrop of estimated market contractio­n of [between] 4% and 5%”.

PPC attributed the fall in cement sales for the nine months to an “uncharacte­ristically weak” December as well as subdued constructi­on activity.

PPC’s drop off in volumes followed the latest FNB/BER civil confidence index rising by one point to 18 in the fourth quarter of 2018 and remaining below 20 for the sixth consecutiv­e quarter. The civil confidence index reflects the state of business conditions in the civil engineerin­g industry.

The group, which also makes aggregates, ready-mix cement, lime and limestone, as well as fly ash, said average cement prices only increased 1% to 2% in Southern Africa.

PPC said its lime business has shown resilience in profitabil­ity, while the aggregates and ready-mix business remains under pressure. The group said volumes at its Zimbabwean business had operationa­l problems in the third quarter of the financial year, resulting in lower growth of volumes. The impact of the fuel hikes in that country was a concern.

PPC is lobbying for suitable tariffs for imports for all countries

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