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India is waiting for the “New Deal”

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The economy is hurting. Estimates about the GDP growth for FY21 have started plummeting. Latest we heard, pundits are forecasting around 15 per cent shrinkage meaning a growth swing of nearly 20 per cent as compared to last year, which in itself was nothing to write home about. All the debate is now around two points recovery – how and when, and stimulus version 2 – how much and when. And all the discussion regarding the interplay between these two issues are very educative. As we partake in this fruitful debate going on all around, and as more and more of poor daily wage earners get pushed into poverty and hunger, the question that keeps haunting us all is how did we get here, and if we can have a "New Deal" like the one unleashed in the USA by Roosevelt during the Great Depression. Can we not have our own series of programmes, public work projects, financial reforms, and regulations enacted by a visionary government which would address our needs for relief, reform, and recovery from the pandemic.

Nearer home, our cement sector is down but not out. True, demand has taken a hit, but the industry being conservatively and prudently managed, is generally strong enough to take the hit and bounce back with deep cost cutting measures and price improvement initiatives. Since this industry is not a stranger to cyclic ups and downs, the producers are quite adept at dealing with demand shocks. A veteran industry leader was quoted recently that the demand for cement in August was higher than the demand in the same month last year. He added that the demand for the rural segment and the Government projects are strong, but the real estate market is slow. I am not sure if this statement hides more than it reveals, in the sense that it may more eloquently qualify the low demand of August last year rather than highlight a spirited demand spurt in August 2020.

A kind of soft contrast to this view, is offered by Care Ratings in their Core Sector Report (which we in ICR religiously follow) for August 2020. The report reports a degrowth of -15 per cent in August 20 v/s a decline of -5 per cent in August 2019 for cement despatches, with overall Apr to Aug 2020 period reporting a shrinkage of – 28 per cent, which is consistent with other indicators.

So, a new deal is what the economy is crying for, and surely, the cement industry can gain from such a set of broad-based impetus measures. No "New Deal" can happen without infrastructure, housing and construction, and cement is the key to all.

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Concrete

Cement industry to gain from new infrastructure spending

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As per a news report, Karan Adani, ACC Chair, has said that he expects the cement industry to benefit from the an anticipated US$2.2tn in new public infrastructure spending between 2025 and 2030. In a statement he said that ACC has crossed the 100Mt/yr cement capacity milestone in April 2025, propelling the company to get closer to its ambitious 140Mt/yr target by the 2028 financial year. The company’s capacity corresponds to 15 per cent of an all-India installed capacity of 686Mt/yr.

Image source:https://cementplantsupplier.com/cement-manufacturing/emerging-trends-in-cement-manufacturing-technology/

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Concrete

AI boom drives demand, says ACA

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The American Cement Association projects a nearly 1Mt annual increase in US cement demand over the next three years, driven by the surge in AI data centres. Consumption by data centres is expected to grow from 247,000 tonnes in 2025 to 860,000 tonnes by 2027. With over 5,400 AI data centres currently operating and numbers forecast to exceed 6,000 by 2027, the association cautions that regulatory hurdles and labour shortages may impact the industry’s ability to meet demand.

Image source:https://img-s-msn-com.akamaized.net/tenant/amp/entityid/AA1zOrih.img?w=2000&h=1362&m=4&q=79

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Concrete

GoldCrest Cement to build plant in India

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GoldCrest Cement will build a greenfield integrated plant with a 3.5Mt/yr clinker capacity and 4.5Mt/yr cement capacity. GoldCrest Cement appointed Humboldt Wedag India as engineering, procurement and construction contractor in March 2025 and targets completion by March 2027. It has signed a 40-year supply agreement with Gujarat Mineral Development Corporation for 150Mt of limestone from its upcoming Lakhpat Punrajpur mine in Gujarat.

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