CBI Ghana to construct calcined clay cement plant in Ghana

Accra, April 25, GNA-CBI Ghana Limited, producers of Supacem Cement, have signed an $80-million contract to construct the world’s largest calcined clay cement plant, a 405,000-ton-per-annum plant at the Tema Free Zones Enclave.

The plant will use new technology to substitute 20 per cent of clinker, the raw material used to make cement, with environmentally-friendly clay from Ghana.

A statement copied to the Ghana News Agency said the operation of the calcined clay cement plant would have impact on the Ghanaian economy.

It said by partially substituting imported clinker for Ghanaian clay, CBI would improve the value-for-money of its cement products for its customers by exceeding Ghanaian cement quality standards, while lowering raw material, energy, and fuel costs.

“Lower imports will also translate to reduced local demand for US dollars and help decrease pressure on US dollar exchange rates. The two-year construction period and the long-term operation of the Calcined Clay Cement plant will create hundreds of low- and high-skilled jobs for Ghanaians,” it said.

The statement noted that substituting clinker with calcined clay in cement production would have immense environmental benefits explaining that using calcined clay to minimise the need for traditional, carbon-intensive clinker was a major advancement towards eliminating the negative environmental footprint from cement production.

The statement quoted Mr Frédéric Albrecht, Chief Executive Officer CBI Ghana Limited as saying, “Ghana is the perfect location for using clay as an environmentally-friendly alternative to clinker. West Africa is traditionally a clinker- and cement-importing region due to the lack of suitable limestone reserves”.

“Developing countries, with their young populations and a growing need for infrastructure and housing, represents the future in cement consumption. Calcined clay cements are the most sustainable alternative to traditional clinker-based cement.”

CBI Ghana’s Calcined Clay Cement plant represents a $80-million investment into the Ghanaian economy and is financed by an international consortium including its parent company F.Scott, Société Générale, Norfund, the Norwegian Investment Fund for Developing Countries, IFU, the Danish Investment Fund for Developing Countries, and EKF Denmark, with equipment supplied by FLSmidth, the world leader in cement manufacturing equipment

GNA

CBI Ghana to construct calcined clay cement plant in Ghana

Accra, April 25, GNA-CBI Ghana Limited, producers of Supacem Cement, have signed an $80-million contract to construct the world’s largest calcined clay cement plant, a 405,000-ton-per-annum plant at the Tema Free Zones Enclave.

The plant will use new technology to substitute 20 per cent of clinker, the raw material used to make cement, with environmentally-friendly clay from Ghana.

A statement copied to the Ghana News Agency said the operation of the calcined clay cement plant would have impact on the Ghanaian economy.

It said by partially substituting imported clinker for Ghanaian clay, CBI would improve the value-for-money of its cement products for its customers by exceeding Ghanaian cement quality standards, while lowering raw material, energy, and fuel costs.

“Lower imports will also translate to reduced local demand for US dollars and help decrease pressure on US dollar exchange rates. The two-year construction period and the long-term operation of the Calcined Clay Cement plant will create hundreds of low- and high-skilled jobs for Ghanaians,” it said.

The statement noted that substituting clinker with calcined clay in cement production would have immense environmental benefits explaining that using calcined clay to minimise the need for traditional, carbon-intensive clinker was a major advancement towards eliminating the negative environmental footprint from cement production.

The statement quoted Mr Frédéric Albrecht, Chief Executive Officer CBI Ghana Limited as saying, “Ghana is the perfect location for using clay as an environmentally-friendly alternative to clinker. West Africa is traditionally a clinker- and cement-importing region due to the lack of suitable limestone reserves”.

“Developing countries, with their young populations and a growing need for infrastructure and housing, represents the future in cement consumption. Calcined clay cements are the most sustainable alternative to traditional clinker-based cement.”

CBI Ghana’s Calcined Clay Cement plant represents a $80-million investment into the Ghanaian economy and is financed by an international consortium including its parent company F.Scott, Société Générale, Norfund, the Norwegian Investment Fund for Developing Countries, IFU, the Danish Investment Fund for Developing Countries, and EKF Denmark, with equipment supplied by FLSmidth, the world leader in cement manufacturing equipment

GNA

CBI Ghana to construct calcined clay cement plant in Ghana

Accra, April 25, GNA-CBI Ghana Limited, producers of Supacem Cement, have signed an $80-million contract to construct the world’s largest calcined clay cement plant, a 405,000-ton-per-annum plant at the Tema Free Zones Enclave.

The plant will use new technology to substitute 20 per cent of clinker, the raw material used to make cement, with environmentally-friendly clay from Ghana.

A statement copied to the Ghana News Agency said the operation of the calcined clay cement plant would have impact on the Ghanaian economy.

It said by partially substituting imported clinker for Ghanaian clay, CBI would improve the value-for-money of its cement products for its customers by exceeding Ghanaian cement quality standards, while lowering raw material, energy, and fuel costs.

“Lower imports will also translate to reduced local demand for US dollars and help decrease pressure on US dollar exchange rates. The two-year construction period and the long-term operation of the Calcined Clay Cement plant will create hundreds of low- and high-skilled jobs for Ghanaians,” it said.

The statement noted that substituting clinker with calcined clay in cement production would have immense environmental benefits explaining that using calcined clay to minimise the need for traditional, carbon-intensive clinker was a major advancement towards eliminating the negative environmental footprint from cement production.

The statement quoted Mr Frédéric Albrecht, Chief Executive Officer CBI Ghana Limited as saying, “Ghana is the perfect location for using clay as an environmentally-friendly alternative to clinker. West Africa is traditionally a clinker- and cement-importing region due to the lack of suitable limestone reserves”.

“Developing countries, with their young populations and a growing need for infrastructure and housing, represents the future in cement consumption. Calcined clay cements are the most sustainable alternative to traditional clinker-based cement.”

CBI Ghana’s Calcined Clay Cement plant represents a $80-million investment into the Ghanaian economy and is financed by an international consortium including its parent company F.Scott, Société Générale, Norfund, the Norwegian Investment Fund for Developing Countries, IFU, the Danish Investment Fund for Developing Countries, and EKF Denmark, with equipment supplied by FLSmidth, the world leader in cement manufacturing equipment

GNA

CBI Ghana to construct calcined clay cement plant in Ghana

Accra, April 25, GNA-CBI Ghana Limited, producers of Supacem Cement, have signed an $80-million contract to construct the world’s largest calcined clay cement plant, a 405,000-ton-per-annum plant at the Tema Free Zones Enclave.

The plant will use new technology to substitute 20 per cent of clinker, the raw material used to make cement, with environmentally-friendly clay from Ghana.

A statement copied to the Ghana News Agency said the operation of the calcined clay cement plant would have impact on the Ghanaian economy.

It said by partially substituting imported clinker for Ghanaian clay, CBI would improve the value-for-money of its cement products for its customers by exceeding Ghanaian cement quality standards, while lowering raw material, energy, and fuel costs.

“Lower imports will also translate to reduced local demand for US dollars and help decrease pressure on US dollar exchange rates. The two-year construction period and the long-term operation of the Calcined Clay Cement plant will create hundreds of low- and high-skilled jobs for Ghanaians,” it said.

The statement noted that substituting clinker with calcined clay in cement production would have immense environmental benefits explaining that using calcined clay to minimise the need for traditional, carbon-intensive clinker was a major advancement towards eliminating the negative environmental footprint from cement production.

The statement quoted Mr Frédéric Albrecht, Chief Executive Officer CBI Ghana Limited as saying, “Ghana is the perfect location for using clay as an environmentally-friendly alternative to clinker. West Africa is traditionally a clinker- and cement-importing region due to the lack of suitable limestone reserves”.

“Developing countries, with their young populations and a growing need for infrastructure and housing, represents the future in cement consumption. Calcined clay cements are the most sustainable alternative to traditional clinker-based cement.”

CBI Ghana’s Calcined Clay Cement plant represents a $80-million investment into the Ghanaian economy and is financed by an international consortium including its parent company F.Scott, Société Générale, Norfund, the Norwegian Investment Fund for Developing Countries, IFU, the Danish Investment Fund for Developing Countries, and EKF Denmark, with equipment supplied by FLSmidth, the world leader in cement manufacturing equipment

GNA