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CEMEX will not take part in proposed US-Mexico border wall

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Mexico’s largest cement company, CEMEX, hassaid that it won’t build President Trump’s proposed controversial wall along the US-Mexico border.

"I want to be very clear on this topic: CEMEX will not participate in the construction of the wall," said Rogelio Zambrano, President of CEMEX. He said his company has not participated in the first round of bids that is currently underway.

Asked whether CEMEX would provide building materials to companies constructing the wall, Zambrano said he had al ready been clear about that particular issue.

Last month, the company had said that it would provide materials to firms that it had signed contracts with, even if they were building the wall.

"If one of our clients requests a quote for materials, we have the responsibility to do so," the company had said in a statement. "But this does not imply that CEMEX will participate in the project."

US President Trump had recently requested $1 billion as the first installment to build his proposed border wall, which has total cost estimates ranging between $12 billion and $24billion.

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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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