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The cement industry has realised the importance of modular grinding techniques and grinding aids to achieve a better quality of product and to obtain high energy efficiency. We see a trend where cement manufacturers are shifting towards more advancement in vertical mill or roll press systems. 


The cement industry has realised the importance of modular grinding techniques and grinding aids to achieve a better quality of product and to obtain high energy efficiency. We see a trend where cement manufacturers are shifting towards more advancement in vertical mill or roll press systems. 

Energy consumption continues to remain the key issue associated with every industry today. In the cement industry, the grinding process accounts for significant energy consumption. Various research papers suggest that the grinding process consumes 60-70 per cent of a cement plant’s electrical demand. Hence, limiting energy consumption at the grinding process level is a major industry focus today. Another key focus area is the end-product. Cement manufacturers are exploring new ways to expand the cement additives range and cement/clinker ratio to make the final product more durable, stronger, and cost-effective. The solutions available in the market today come with versatile technologies, with low-energy consumption, as well as are easily capable of adapting to a wide range of raw materials. In short, solutions that offer low energy consumption and high flexibility are in high demand. 

Trends

The three key trends in the grinding process in the cement industry are– efficiency, reduction of power consumption, and system flexibility/simplicity. In terms of demand, vertical mills have increased their share as compared to ball mills. The use of separate grinding plants is observed to have picked up drastically. IT Vendors have also increased their focus towards offering more and more technologically advanced and energy-efficient solutions for the grinding process. 

Avanish Karrahe, Global Product Manager Grinding Products, Cement Industry, FLSmidth, said, “Along with mill design, advancement in high-efficiency separator design has further improved energy efficiency by reducing the amount of over-grinding, unnecessarily returning product-size material to the grinding part of the machine, allowing for more stable operation and better overall product quality.”

He further explains that when combined with the latest mill designs an optimised separator offers potential for up to 10% better overall energy efficiency than mill systems with inferior separators.

Grinding process

Many factors influence the grindability of cement/clinker. For example, clinker with a high content of small pores will be easy to grind. Other factors such as crystal size, cooling velocity, age of clinker also influence the grindability. A part of the grinding is done in a pregrinding unit, with help of roller press, vertical shaft impact crusher, and vertical roller mill. 

In another scenario, the tube mill is omitted, and entire grinding work is done in roller press with desagglomerator and rotor type separator or vertical roller mill with integrated rotor type separator. 

Various technical and economic aspects are taken into consideration before selecting the best grinding mechanism. Furthermore, factors such as mill feed, composition, grindability of components, grain size, moisture content of additive, mill control, manual or automatic processes, grinding aid, etc. 

Explains Dr. Bibekananda Mohapatra, Director General, National Council for Cement and Building Materials, “Comparing different grinding systems, high pressure grinding rolls are at par in energy efficiency as compared to VRMs for grinding purpose. In VRMs, recent development in slave rollers is also providing grinding force enabling high energy efficiency. Advancements in VRM main drive gearbox is leading to lower cooling requirement and reduction in energy loss.”

Ball Mills: Ball mill systems are not the preferred option for any new projects. However, a few companies prefer starting with ball mills with minimum investment, and later when they expand the business, they adopt roller press or vertical mill for pre-grinding of clinker. 

Vertical roller mill systems (VRM): These are the most versatile equipment, which can handle all the types of raw materials, solid fuels, and additives used in the cement process.

Karrahe says that roller presses and vertical roller mills have much higher grinding efficiencies compared to traditional ball mills and can operate with almost half the electrical energy consumption compared to a traditional ball mill.

Roller press systems: Over the last few decades, with the developments of technology and material sciences, roller press technology has now evolved as one of the most energy-efficient grinding systems for raw meal and cement grinding, completely eliminating the ball mills in grinding circuits.

Modular grinding v/s conventional

Traditional method: Grinding of clinker from the kiln is the final manufacturing stage at a cement plant. The griding process includes 4-5 percent gypsum and grinding aids (additives), into the final product, cement.

The cement grinding process accounts for approximately 40-50 percent of the energy consumption. It is noteworthy that the quality of the final cement is extremely dependent on the operation/grinding mode. The cement quality and the consumption of electrical energy are dependent on the grinding procedure. Thus, the cement grinding plant must be adequately designed and operated.

Modular grinding: This system is a portable solution for companies that need of quick start of production or need to increase production capacity on short notice to meet the peak market demands. Today, many vendors offer modular grinding mechanisms that offer quick installation setup, enhanced product performance, and low energy consumption. They are designed in such a way that it suits a wide range of raw material types and finish products’ variety (recipe, fineness, etc).

The advantages of the modular design are:

  • Proven technology of major equipment
  • Low cost of transportation of equipment to site
  • Low delivery times of equipment
  • Low investment risk and fast market entry
  • Low construction and Installation periods
  • Compact design with minimum land usage

Automation in grinding process

Today, a lot of many equipment companies have come up with automation solutions allowing the grinding process to be fully automated. They offer dynamic systems, which are more accurate to control than a conventional ball mill. Fully automated systems allow easy management of raw material quality variations and are very smooth and safe to operate. Moreover, automation in grinding also eliminates the high responsibility of daily operations, thus allowing resources to focus on more valuable tasks.

During the pandemic, remote services have picked up fast, offering daily operations, predictive maintenance, and troubleshooting services. This kind of development has shown its relevance during the pandemic.

In the past decade, the cement industry has realised the importance of process control in grinding circuits to achieve a better quality of product, and to obtain high energy efficiency. The PLC-based automation system is so common even in mill systems of capacities as low as 30 tph.

Karrahe said “The use of digital technology such as advanced process control can further improve energy efficiency by as much as 5 percent. References of combining separator upgrades to modern high-efficiency design or upsizing to accommodate new feed materials and/or product types with advanced process control have yielded as much as 25 percent overall performance improvement.”

“Reduction in mills pressure drop, optimisation of grinding media in ball mills, separator fan volume loading, the addition of grinding aids are some of the optimisation measures adopted by cement plants as seen in recent PAT cycles. Some high-energy efficient plants have already achieved overall specific electrical energy consumption of 63-65 kWh/t cement. It is anticipated that with the improvements in motor efficiencies, fan efficiencies, implementation of above-mentioned technologies and innovations, there is a scope for further electrical energy savings in grinding section,” explains Dr. Mohapatra.

Grinding aids

Cement clinker is difficult to grind, and the fine grinding of this material is one of the major problems of the cement industry. Cement clinker is difficult to grind, and the fine grinding of this material is one of the major problems of the cement industry. One method is to use special breakage machines, but it is usually more expensive as it requires more energy and reduces capacity. The most economic and the best alternative is to use a grinding aid or additives to obtain the best product.

Grinding aid or grinding additives are substances which when mixed into the grinding mill contents lead to an increase in the rate of size reduction and flowability. These additives are added into the material in a certain ratio based on the weight and the grinding machine for a definite time at the same condition. Different types of grinding additives are suitable for clinker grinding, which results in an improvement in the grindability by decreasing agglomeration and increasing breakage.

The use of grinding aid is a common practice in cement manufacturing for bringing improvements in mill capacity and overall better operations. For example, grinding aid stabilises the grinding bed in a VRM. This reduces the vibration level, for more capacity at the same power use. Since grinding aids offer better stability, it reduces the requirement of stopping and starting the mills, which further decreases the total energy consumption.

Conclusion

Globally, cement producers are fighting climate change challenges and the focus is more toward attaining sustainability in each step of cement manufacturing. Suppliers are well aware of this challenge and are coming up with innovative ideas to develop flexible solutions with high levels of energy efficiency, emission control, and product quality. Such kind of evolution will help the cement industry reduce the use of natural resources, make use of recycled materials and preserve energy consumption.

In terms of choosing the grinding system, though ball mill systems are still preferred due to less CAPEX, we see a shift in the industry towards vertical mill or roll press systems.

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Concrete

Berger Paints Announces Financial Results for the Quarter Ended

Net Profit for the quarter was Rs 2.06 billion, compared to Rs 2.69 billion in the corresponding quarter of the previous year.

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Berger Paints India announced its financial results for the quarter ended September 30, 2025.
The company reported Revenue from Operations of Rs 28.27 billion, compared to Rs 27.74 billion in the corresponding quarter last year, reflecting a growth of 1.9 per cent year-on-year.
EBITDA (excluding other income) stood at Rs 3.52 billion, as against Rs 4.34 billion in the same period last year, registering a decline of 18.9 per cent.
Net Profit for the quarter was Rs 2.06 billion, compared to Rs 2.69 billion in the corresponding quarter of the previous year, marking a decline of 23.5 per cent year-on-year.
Commenting on the performance, Abhijit Roy, Managing Director & CEO, Berger Paints India, said, “At Berger Paints, we remain committed to driving growth through network expansion, innovation, and brand building. Our focus continues to be on delivering long-term value for our investors and stakeholders.”

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Concrete

Ambuja Cements posts record Q2, lifts FY28 capacity target

PAT rises to Rs 23.02 bn; volumes up 20%; margin widens 450 bps

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Ahmedabad, recently — Ambuja Cements, part of the Adani Portfolio, reported a strong Q2 FY26 performance with consolidated PAT of Rs 23.02 billion (up 364 per cent year on year), highest-ever Q2 sales volume of 16.6 million tonnes (up 20 per cent) and revenue of Rs 91.74 billion (up 21 per cent). EBITDA rose to Rs 17.61 billion with a margin of 19.2 per cent, while EBITDA per tonne reached Rs 1,060 (up 32 per cent). EPS stood at Rs 7.2 (up 267 per cent). The PAT figure includes an income-tax provision reversal of Rs 16.97 billion.
The company raised its FY28 capacity goal by 15 MTPA to 155 MTPA, largely through low-capex debottlenecking at about USD 48 per tonne. Thirteen new blenders are being installed to optimise product mix and lift the share of premium cement, and logistics debottlenecking is expected to add around three per cent utilisation to the existing 107 MTPA base over 24 months.
On projects, a 4 MTPA kiln at Bhatapara has begun trial runs, the 2 MTPA Krishnapatnam grinding unit has been operationalised, and an additional 7 MTPA across three locations is slated for Q3. Renewable power capacity reached 673 MW after commissioning 200 MW, with targets of 900 MW by year-end and 1,122 MW by FY27.
Cost discipline continued: kiln fuel, power and logistics costs declined year on year; green power share of consumption rose to 32.9 per cent; and logistics cost stood at Rs 1,224 per tonne. Management reiterated end-FY26 total cost guidance of about Rs 4,000 per tonne and a pathway to Rs 3,650 per tonne by FY28, supported by higher coal share, newer assets, shorter lead distances (including a growing sea-logistics share), and long-term fly ash/slag tie-ups.
Strategically, Ambuja launched CiNOC (Cement Intelligent Network Operations Centre) to embed AI across sales, production and logistics; deepened engagements with CONCOR, CREDAI and 400+ academic partners; and ordered seven vessels totalling 65,800 DWT to lift coastal movement to five per cent. The company remains debt-free with net worth of Rs 694.93 billion and the highest Crisil ratings (AAA/Stable; A1+).

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Concrete

India, EU Resume Talks To Finalise Free Trade Agreement

High-level negotiators meet in Delhi to push balanced trade deal

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A senior delegation from the European Union (EU) is in New Delhi from 3 to 7 November 2025 to hold detailed discussions with Indian counterparts on the proposed India–EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA). The negotiations aim to resolve key pending issues and move closer to a comprehensive, balanced, and mutually beneficial trade framework.

The visit follows Union Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal’s official trip to Brussels on 27–28 October 2025, during which he held forward-looking talks with European Commissioner for Trade and Economic Security Maroš Šef?ovi?. Both sides reaffirmed their commitment to intensify dialogue and strengthen cooperation towards finalising the FTA.

This week’s deliberations will focus on trade in goods and services, rules of origin, and technical and institutional matters, guided by the shared goal of creating a modern and future-ready trade pact that reflects the priorities and sensitivities of both India and the EU.

The discussions gained further momentum after a virtual meeting on 3 November 2025 between Minister Piyush Goyal, Commissioner Maroš Šef?ovi?, and EU Commissioner for Agriculture and Food Christophe Hansen, which helped align positions on key areas of mutual interest.

As part of the ongoing negotiations, Ms. Sabine Weyand, Director-General for Trade at the European Commission (EU DG Trade), will visit New Delhi on 5–6 November for high-level consultations with India’s Commerce Secretary Rajesh Aggarwal. The talks will address technical and policy matters critical to concluding the agreement.

The EU delegation’s visit underscores the shared determination of India and the European Union to conclude a fair, transparent, and equitable FTA, aimed at boosting trade, investment, innovation, and sustainable economic growth.

Both sides view the FTA as a strategic pillar in their partnership, capable of enhancing market access, creating new opportunities for businesses, and promoting a resilient and diversified global supply chain.

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