Business

Ethiopian Largest Cement Plant to Start Output This Month

December 6, 2011   ·   14 Comments

Sheikh Mohammed Al-Amoudi, Owner and Chairman Of MIDROC Ethiopia. He holds both Ethiopian and Saudi nationality

Dec. 5 (Bloomberg) — Derba MIDROC Cement Plc, Ethiopia’s biggest cement factory, said it will start production within the “next 10 days,” helping end a shortage of the building material in Africa’s fourth-largest economy.

clip image002.831736 std Ethiopian Largest Cement Plant to Start Output This Month

Ethiopian-Saudi Billionaire Sheikh Mohammed Al-Amoudi, Owner and Chairman Of MIDROC Ethiopia.

The $351 million plant, about 70 kilometers (44 miles) northwest of the capital, Addis Ababa, will produce 8,000 metric tons of the building material daily by February, said Chief Executive Officer Haile Assegide. Derba is part of the MIDROC Ethiopia group owned by Mohammed al-Amoudi, an Ethiopian-born Saudi Arabian billionaire who is one of the biggest investors in the Horn of Africa nation.

Once output begins, Ethiopia “will be self-sufficient for the coming two to three years” in cement, Haile said in an interview at the site on Dec. 1.

Ethiopia, a net importer of cement, plans to boost output ten-fold by mid-2015 to 27 million tons, according to the government. The Derba plant will add 2.5 million tons per year, while expansions to Mesobo Building Materials Production Plc, owned by the country’s ruling party, and state-owned Mugher Cement Enterprise will add another 1 million, it said.

Dangote Cement Plc, Nigeria’s biggest company by market value, said in October it plans to invest $400 million in an Ethiopian factory with the capacity to produce 1.5 million tons per year.

Derba Cement, built by China National Building Material Co., may earn more than 2 billion birr ($115.9 million) annually, Project Manager Tadesse Kebede said in an interview at the site. “If everything goes well it will be a cash cow,” he said.

Al-Amoudi’s company invested $100 million in the operation, with the European Investment Bank, the African Development Bank, the International Finance Corp. and the Development Bank of Ethiopia providing the rest of the funds.

The project was delayed for “almost one year” because obtaining the loans took longer than expected, Tadesse said. “To work with multilateral banks is very difficult,” he said.

The factory, which took 3 1/2 years to complete, will require as much as 60 megawatts of electricity from the national grid, Haile said. The company paid for transmission lines and a sub-station to power the plant, according to Haile.

Sourc: Business Week

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Readers Comments (14)

  1. Abraham says:

    Why can't we rebuild our own factory near Berbera? Surely we can raise the necessary funds if we all buy shares.

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  2. Khaalid says:

    I have been told it will take about £100,00 to start cement factory in berbera – any1 got a spare £100k?

    It difficult choosing what industries to support especially since oil is so big on the agenda

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    • MsSomaliland says:

      Dude, it's more like 100 Million..it's a very expensive project and will require outside investment if ever the Berbera Cement factory is to take off…but Insha Alaah Khayre.

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  3. Barkhad says:

    Why is this news ? its NOT even mentioned on the Somali galbeed sites , are we kilin 7 ?

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    • abdi says:

      That is because, cement is essential for developing parts of city roads and sidewalks as well as for most construction. Today we buy most of our cement from abroad at inflated prizes, no wonder we can't build decent sky scrapers, proper side-walks or bridges, so maybe having a factory nearby in a country we have good economic relationship, we would be able to buy it at a decent prize until we are able to get the investments we need to erect our own factory. I am really sorry bro that u can see that and some how make it into something insulting.

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      • abdi says:

        correction "can not see that"

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  4. isse says:

    I wonder who constructed the Berbera factory, probably the US. If it needs all that amount of investment like mentioned above, it shows how much aid Somalia used to get in the past.

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  5. Sry says:

    Ethiopia will become East Africa's future super power. Not Kenya, Tanzania nor Uganda. All these Countries are growing extremely fast. In Uganda poverty are dropping fast in one report it's now around 20% down from around 36%. Kenya has a middle class of over 1,5 million (largest in east Africa). Many of our neighbours are soon to become middle income economies if not already. And yet where is Somalia its a effin joke! Sland is a extremely poor country like our neighbours. But they are growing fast we aren't because we aren't a recognized country. Believe me that is why Sland is so democratic because we didn't revive outside "help". I have no plans of "returning" to Sland before i grow very old hehe.

    West is my home this is the life i only know.
    Before all of you "patriots come and nagg. Take your family and relatives their and find your self a good job!
    And change your passport to a Somalilander oh right you will not so dont even think of commenting.

    Africa is the poorest continent but i hope that in 50 years we are on equal ground with Europe (highly unlikely)
    But this is a goal Africans should aim for not the diaspora.

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    • Caynaanshe says:

      Democracy is the base of development for any country ,Ethiopia Does NOT have neither does it the stability of china ,Ethiopia has internal conflicts and its at war with its neighbors Eritrea and Somalia ,Ethiopia is one of poorest countries in the world and its hard hit by Aids especially among its few highly educated urban youth,despite all this Ethiopia has been trying to label it self as a economic tiger by fixing its statics so the so called economy growth of Ethiopia is always better then china in paper despite that 90 % of Ethiopia's budget Comes from international Aid its long way before Ethiopia becomes a rich country !

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  6. Ali says:

    Is it true that Dahabshiil with a group of Somali investors which included TeleSom were refused…i.e. Issa Musa sub-clan from re-building Berbera cement factory?

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    • Liiban Khalif says:

      The previous cement factory was belonged to the people and was build by the people of Nothern Somalia. But this kind of investments were rejected by the Somalis almost fifty years ago. Specially, investment from Ethiopia was unimaginable to accept by any Somalis. Other alternative investment from Dahabshiil and other Somali groups were better preferable and wise move. "Intuu Hindi beesaysan lahaa Cali ha biyeesto".

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    • Sarcastic_Nomad says:

      Yes they did, even though the license was for a new factory not the old one – which has been give to issa muse "businessmen" in 2003 -, on the grounds that the first old factory holders cant compete with Dahabshill – telesom have withdrawn after the protests- :).

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  7. Weershe says:

    aren't there any "NEWS" today beside this aids ababa cement thing ? or have we being drinking last night…

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  8. Mohamd says:

    http://www.eib.org/projects/press/2008/2008-052-e
    Ethiopia: EIB lends EUR 29 million for Derba Midroc Cement Factory

     Reply