The Star Early Edition

Africa’s richest man ready to tackle Lafarge

Nigeria’s Aliko Dangote wants to become the continent’s king of cement

- Liezel Hill and Matthew Hill

AFRICA’S richest man is pushing to dominate its market for cement, the material at the heart of the continent’s infrastruc­ture boom.

All that stands in his way is the world’s biggest cement maker, a flood of low-priced imports, the threat of slowing growth in contracts for dams, ports and roads and a slump in the most-traded emergingma­rket currencies to a record low. It’s not stopping Aliko Dangote.

“Africa’s future growth is intrinsica­lly linked to cement,” Dangote, 58, told assembled dignitarie­s, including Zambian President Edgar Lungu, earlier this month as he opened a new factory on the outskirts of Ndola, Zambia’s third-largest city. The material is “the most basic input into building infrastruc­ture.”

The plant would help bring Dangote Cement’s total production capacity to 43 million tons by the end of this year, within striking distance of the African capacity of market leader LafargeHol­cim – which runs its own Zambia factory about 30km from the plant Dangote was opening.

Dangote Cement, which has expanded capacity fivefold in the last four years, plans to about double potential output, to 80 million tons, Dangote says. The Ndola plant is one of five new factories he’s opening this year across sub-Saharan Africa, including two in the LafargeHol­cim stronghold­s of Cameroon and Zambia.

Africa has become one of the world’s fastest-growing regions for the building material as rapid urbanisati­on and spending on transport, power and shipping boost demand. Significan­t projects under constructi­on include Ethiopia’s $4 billion (R51.82bn) hydro-power dam on the Blue Nile River and a $13bn railway that will link the Kenyan port of Mombasa to the Rwandan capital of Kigali via Uganda.

With 50 million tons a year of cement capacity, LafargeHol­cim is the largest producer in continenta­l Africa.

New plants

“Dangote is rapidly expanding its footprint across sub-Saharan Africa,” said Pabina Yinkere, head of research at Lagos-based Vetiva Capital Management. “Many of the cement plants within the region are old and ageing. Their efficiency has fallen, so with its new plants it will be able to compete strongly.”

The additional production from Dangote’s new factories is already having an effect on local cement markets. In Senegal, the company says it provides more than 30 percent of all cement sold in the country, where it opened its first plant in January.

In Zambia, cement prices have fallen about 20 percent, a result of Dangote’s push against LafargeHol­cim, according to Sipho Phiri, who chairs a company planning to build a $180 million hydro power project in the west of the country.

The project would need about 20 000 tons of the material, so the price drop makes a significan­t reduction to his capital investment, he said. And none of it will come from Lafarge Zambia. “They were taking advantage of their monopoly,” said Phiri. “People including myself, as a matter of principle, will only buy Dangote cement. I’m emotional about it.”

50m Tons of cement a year the capacity of LafargeHol­cim

Lafarge Zambia chief executive Emmanuel Rigaux rejected Phiri’s claims that the company had taken advantage of its position.

“We’ve been growing with Zambia,” he said. “We were the first really big constructi­on company to go ahead with a very large investment. We were the first to see the potential that Zambia had.”

Lafarge Zambia is doubling capacity at its Lusaka plant in a € 200 million (R3.04 billion) project as it seeks to capitalise on growing demand in Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Increased competitio­n and lower prices won’t change its plans, he said.

Lafarge, which last month completed a merger with Switzerlan­d’s Holcim to form the world’s biggest cement maker, said in February last year it planned to increase sub-Saharan Africa capacity to more than 30 million tons by 2017 from 20 million tons. The combined company had about 50 million tons of capacity on continenta­l Africa at the end of last year.

“Africa is a fast-growing region with huge constructi­on needs supported by demographi­c trends and growing urbanisati­on,” LafargeHol­cim said. The company “is well positioned to serve the continent’s constructi­on needs from its existing strong supply network in cement with facilities in 15 countries” in Africa.

New investment­s

The speed and scale of new investment­s in Africa’s natural resource-based economies may falter as commodity prices fall and growth slows in China, the biggest consumer of materials from copper to iron ore. A gauge tracking 20 of the most-traded emerging-market currencies depreciate­d 0.7 percent on Monday to a record low, making it harder for those countries to pay for imported materials.

The market slump has not changed Dangote Cement’s expansion plans, Carl Franklin, the company’s head of investor relations, said on Monday. “We don’t think that short-term,” he said. “Africa will be building for decades.”

In countries including Tanzania, cheap imports, including from China, are weighing on prices and threatenin­g margins for local producers. South Africa in May imposed anti-dumping duties on the material coming from Pakistan.

Expanding

Even so, the two biggest cement producers in Africa are not the only ones expanding. Johannesbu­rg-based PPC is building new plants in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Zimbabwe and Ethiopia, and has started production in Rwanda.

Heidelberg­Cement of Germany added 2.9 million tons of capacity in Africa last year, its biggest growth region. The company’s pending takeover of Italcement­i may double its market share in the Middle East and Africa, according to data, and Heidelberg­Cement predicts that cement demand would expand 50 percent by 2020 in the sub-Saharan region.

“Capacity is not enough to meet demand in these countries,” Baldeira said. “When we think about the future of the world demand for cement in the next 10 years, Africa will be a big driver.” – Bloomberg

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Aliko Dangote, billionair­e and chief executive of Dangote Group, is busy expanding his cement empire across Africa in the firm belief that the material is at the heart of the continent’s infrastruc­ture boom.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Aliko Dangote, billionair­e and chief executive of Dangote Group, is busy expanding his cement empire across Africa in the firm belief that the material is at the heart of the continent’s infrastruc­ture boom.

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