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Chinese imports threaten cement sector

16 March 2016

South Africa’s cement industry is facing a new imports challenge, this time from Chinese producers.
Donald Mackay, a director at XA International Trade Advisers, claimed yesterday that at least one factory in China had already been approved to export cement to South Africa and other Chinese producers were believed to have applied for approval.

“It won’t be long before a number of other Chinese factories are approved and we see Chinese cement simply replacing the Pakistani cement in South Africa,” he said.

All cement has to be certified as being compliant with the South African compulsory specification before it can be sold into the domestic market.

The SA Bureau of Standards failed to respond to a request for comment on how many Chinese cement producers had been approved and how many other applications had been lodged but not yet approved.

The competitive threat from the Chinese follows a number of local producers lodging a dumping complaint with the International Trade Administration Commission (Itac) about cement imported from Pakistan.

Itac imposed duties ranging between 14.29% and 77.15% on cement imported from Pakistan, resulting in cement imports into South Africa from Pakistan dropping by 30% percent year on year to September.
The Pakistan government had also approached the World Trade Organisation to have Itac’s anti-dumping rules revoked.

Mackay said about 38,000 tons of cement were exported from China to South Africa in both September and November – equivalent to two full shiploads.

Stratalyze, an import and export data webpage managed by XA Trade Advisers, revealed that 645,910 tons of cement had been imported into South Africa from Pakistan between January last year and January this year, while 77,640 tons had been imported from China.
Mackay said the imposition of anti-dumping duties should drive business to the domestic cement industry, but this was not happening.

Siobhan McCarthy, the general manager communications at PPC, said the latest SA Revenue Service data indicated that more than 90% of the cement imported into South Africa had originated from Pakistan, with the balance imported from a number of countries, including China.

Lafarge South Africa said it was committed to the sustainable development of South Africa, which might be threatened by cheap imports.

The company said it believed that there was no need for cheap imports in light of South Africa’s favourable competitive laws.
But Mackay said the weakening in the value of the rand meant that Pakistan’s US dollar-based exports had become significantly more expensive, while the depreciation in the value of the Chinese yuan had suddenly made Chinese exports more competitive.

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