$5m cement project nears completion

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A LEADING Chinese Zimbabwean joint venture is on track to complete a massive facility upgrade with $5 million invested by the Chinese shareholder, a senior company official revealed.

A LEADING Chinese Zimbabwean joint venture is on track to complete a massive facility upgrade with $5 million invested by the Chinese shareholder, a senior company official revealed.

After the upgrade, expected to be completed in the next few month, the Sino-Zimbabwe Cement Company will become one of the country’s top cement producers, Wang Yong, the company’s managing director, said.

“We are now halfway through the upgrade,” Wang told Xinhua this week at the trees-surrounded cement plant located in the mineral-rich Midlands province. “We have installed a modern bag filter system to cut emission. No more thick dusts or smoke from the chimney now.”

Wang said close to $1 million was spent on improving pollution control while the rest is being used to refurbish cement mills, rotary kilns, build a cement warehouse, and install new packaging lines. After the upgrade, the cement plant’s clinker output is expected to reach at least

200 000 tons a year, nearly twice the output of 2013. The plant, which started operation in 2001 under the witness of President Robert Mugabe, is a joint venture between Industrial Development Corporation of Zimbabwe and China Building Material Industrial Corporation for Foreign Econo-Technical Cooperation with an initial investment of $54 million.

The factory employs more than 400 workers, with 95% from Zimbabweans, manning almost all ranks of positions from assembly line workers to senior managers.

Wang said as part of the facility upgrade, the board of cement plant decided to restructure the work-forces by recruiting 32 local skilled workers to replace 59 under-skilled workers who would be offered retrenchment packages.

Wang explained that the retrenchment is different from similar actions being taken by the country’s struggling manufacturers, which are forced to close or scale down operations due to bleak economic outlook.

—Xinhua