BUA, Ibeto, Dangote State Commitment to Reps Position on 42.5 Cement Grade

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Founder and Chief Executive of Dangote Group Aliko Dangote gestures during an interview with Reuters in his office in Lagos, in this June 13, 2012 file picture. Dangote has always liked making things to sell. As a child he boiled up sugar to make sweets he sold around town; these days he cooks up limestone in factories that produce millions of tonnes of cement. Dangote's entrepreneurial skills have helped make him Africa's richest person, with cement plants opened or under construction everywhere from Senegal to Ethiopia to South Africa. He dreams of owning the largest cement firm on the planet. By 2015, he hopes, his industrial conglomerate will be worth four times its current estimated $15 billion. To match Special Report NIGERIA-DANGOTE/ REUTERS/Akintunde Akinleye/Files (NIGERIA - Tags: BUSINESS)
Major cement manufacturers in the country have pledged their commitment to the position of the House Representatives that the 42.5mpa cement grade should be the minimum standard to be produced for general building and construction in the country, while all expired cement should be withdrawn forthwith from the market.
Cement manufacturers, BUA, Ibeto and Dangote, all stated that long before the quality review by the Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) which pegged the 42.5mpa grade as the minimum standard for general purpose use, they were already producing that grade as their minimum quality.
Last week the Hon Dogara-led ad-hoc Committee on Cement Composition and Pigmentation had after a public hearing from stakeholders, submitted its report to the House of Representatives, in which it asked the SON to commence implementation of the new cement standardisation and that manufacturers should retool their machineries for the production of the higher grade of cement.
Its recommendation according to the report was based on the fact that if offered the chance to chose between 32.5 and 42.5 grades of cement, consumers would choose the 42.5 higher grade and that because those often employed for building are mostly non-professionals, it would be in the national interest to adopt a cement grade that is less susceptible to wrong application.
Also the Committee submitted that any cement manufacturer or distributor implicated in the sale of expired cement must be maximally sanctioned to ensure that sanity prevails in the nation’s cement manufacturing and construction industry.
Chairman of BUA Cement, Abdulsamad Rabiu, said after a meeting in Lagos weekend that what the House of Reps had done was patriotic and it should be supported by all manufacturers with the safety and well-being of the people at heart.
According to him, BUA which operates the oldest cement plant in Nigeria, the Cement Company of Northern Nigeria (CCNN), has been producing the higher grade of cement right from the outset and that his company sees nothing wrong with the Reps decision.
As a responsible corporate entity with the interest of the nation and its people at heart, we value the lives of our people more than profit, and therefore supports our lawmakers.
He explained that what cement manufacturers and indeed other stakeholders should do is to cooperate with the SON as the regulating authority so that the menace of structural failure could abate.
Rabiu stated: “The BUA Cement brand is different from others because it is of 42.5 and 52.5 texture grade. This is the highest quality texture which mixes and dries easily. Most companies import lower quality. Our prices are also competitive within the industry and our delivery process is excellent.
In its reaction, the management of Dangote Cement said it was poised to give all necessary support to the government and its agencies to succeed in the bid to stem the spate of building collapse through production of quality cement that can stand the test of time.
Its Group Managing Director, Devakumar Edwin, explained that Dangote Cement has never produced a lower grade of cement and that the quality review by SON, which was also affirmed by the federal lawmakers who investigated the disturbing menace of structure failures only confirmed its long held view that Nigerians deserve the best quality of cement.
Corroborating the lawmakers, Edwin stated that the 42.5 grade of cement was the minimum standard to be produced in the best interest of the country, given that most builders are non-professionals who know little or nothing about the right application of cement as a key component of construction.
He said: “I say this because, with the strength of the 42.5, it will be less susceptible to wrong application and therefore saves the people the hassles of how best to apply cement. Anything contrary to promotion of 42.5 as the better grade by any manufacturer could only be motivated by profit.
As for us in Dangote Cement, we have the understanding that the new standard which prescribes the production and use of the 52.5 grade of cement for the construction of bridges; the 42.5 grade for the casting of columns, slabs and moulding of blocks and other construction works is in line with the current prevailing international standards to which we pledge our full support.
As a responsible and patriotic corporate citizen with the interest of Nigerians as our primary concern, we state our unreserved support for the new cement standards especially as this will help to further improve safety in the Nigerian building and construction industry.
Ibeto cement had in a recent advertorial published in national newspapers across the country announced its compliance with the production of the 42.5 cement grade as the minimum standard.
A major cement distributor and leader of Cement distributors in Lagos, Kingsley Jaja commended the House Representatives for its intervention in the unsavoury situation in the construction industry, saying his members were particularly happy with the stand of the lawmakers especially on the need for withdrawal of expired cement and punishment for any manufacturer implicated in the unwholesome practice.
In Nigeria, consumers enjoy no protection and the position of the federal lawmakers is a form of protection for the consumers in the building industry against unscrupulous manufacturers of cement. All over the world, defective products are withdrawn from the market, just as we see automobile manufacturers recalling defective vehicles no matter the number of them already in the market, he stated.

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