Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Saturday, Aug 04, 2007
ePaper

Clasic Farm

News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Home Page - Cement
Industry & Economy - Rural Development
States - Tamil Nadu
No bidders for TN Govt’s cement tender

Time extended till Aug 13

R. Balaji

Chennai, Aug. 3 Cement manufacturers have not responded to the Tamil Nadu Government’s tender floated for the supply of nine lakh tonnes of cement for development programmes, according to sources.

The tender floated by the Rural Development Department is being kept open for an additional fortnight up to August 13 because there have been no bidders.

The reason is a supply crunch in the face of continued demand for cement, the sources said.

Also, suppliers are discouraged by the bid for OPC (Ordinary Portland Cement) Grade 43 for construction work that could well be met by fly ash-blended cement (Portland Pozzolona Cement).

The demand for such a large quantity of OPC would aggravate market shortage, the sources said.

Cement manufacturers who are stretched to capacity make blended cement to meet the demand, by blending with fly ash up to 30 per cent.

Using OPC where blended cement will do would mean an unnecessary reduction of about 2-3 lakh tonnes of cement in the market.

The installed capacity in the four Southern States is about 52 million tonnes a year out of the total of 168 million tonnes across the country; almost all mills are working to capacity. But demand, which is growing at about 10 per cent a year, continues to outstrip supply, the sources said.

The Rural Development Department needs over 16 lakh tonnes of cement this year for constructing houses, schools and community buildings under the tsunami rehabilitation programme.

The State-run Tamil Nadu Cement Corporation (Tancem) is to supply seven lakh tonnes, with the rest to come from market supply.

Over the last few weeks the Tamil Nadu Government has called cement manufacturers for discussions on cement pricing and supply. Recently, it had even said that it would opt for direct imports of cement.

Industry representatives had pointed out that cement pricing was a function of the market, according to the sources. Manufacturers were helpless in controlling cement prices.

They had recently tried to stabilise prices but retailers were taking advantage of the heavy demand to hike prices and expand their own margins.

Related Stories:
Cement plants unable to meet demand despite operating to full capacity
Cement prices continue to rule high in South
Rural housing turns best bet for cement

More Stories on : Cement | Rural Development | Tamil Nadu

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



PNB Hiring

Stories in this Section
Emerging rain spell may last a fortnight


Kharif sowing gathers pace
No bidders for TN Govt’s cement tender
‘Pak cement by year-end’
‘AP leads in cement capacity expansion’
Forex reserves up $3.31 b
Indian Hotels shifting to ‘rupee tariff’
RIL pegs 3 tcf gas from North-East coast block
Tata Steel to buy 35% in Australian co Riversdale’s Mozambique Coal Project
Puravankara cuts IPO price band
Reliance Ind weighs $6-b semi-conductor foray
TCS secures multi-year deal from Geneva firm
IT jobs will double to 3.2 m in four years, says Nilekani
Microsoft India centre working on Windows 7
Deregulation hits non-life insurers’ premium accretions in Q1
Suryajyoti Spinning sees surge in traded quantity
Hitachi Home hits new peaks
PSBs post 47% profit growth in first quarter
Jury is still out on hedge funds, says SEBI chief


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2007, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line