
Gypsum industry news
Knauf UK joins Planet Mark
13 June 2022UK: Knauf UK has joined Planet Mark, an organisation that offers sustainability certification to businesses via the independent verification of social and carbon data. In doing this, Knauf has also committed to a CO2 emissions reduction of at least 2.5%/yr. Planet Mark is in the process of verifying data submitted by Knauf based on its 2021 operations and Knauf will be publishing a report later in 2022 which will outline the findings. The outcome of the report will shape Knauf’s sustainability strategy moving forward.
Steve Malkin, the chief executive officer of Planet Mark said “We are thrilled to welcome Knauf into the Planet Mark community. Without precise measurements, progress cannot be tracked and Knauf has taken the vital steps necessary to begin taking action on its emissions.”
Japan: Germany-based Knauf Group has launched a public tender offer to increase its stake in the Japanese wallboard producer Chiyode Ute from 50% to 75%. Knauf is the largest wallboard producer by installed capacity outside of China.
Speaking to Global Gypsum, Chiyode Ute’s Vice President and Representative Director Frederick Knauf said that the founding family Hirata would retain a 25% stake in the company. He added “For Knauf Group this is very exciting. Japan is the world’s third-largest wallboard market and one in which Chiyode Ute has a 20% market share. It is also a challenging market, where customers expect the best in terms of quality, delivery and customer service. We will continue to work with the Hirata family to further develop the company’s capabilities to better serve this demanding market in the future. Chiyoda Ute will be fully integrated into the Knauf Group.”
Knauf has no plans to leave Russian market
04 March 2022Russia/Ukraine: Jörg Schanow, a member of the management board of Knauf, says that the company has no plans to leave the Russian market. In an interview with the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper he said that Russian production sites were still running as normal.
The company has set up crisis management team since the start of the war in Ukraine in late February 2022. It has been meeting daily and discussing the situation with local management in Russia. Schanow said that the biggest business problem so far was the effect of US and European economic sanctions upon Russian banks and the consequences upon moving money between banks, suppliers and customers. The Germany-based company employees 3900 staff at 14 sites in Russia. It originally purchased a gypsum plant at Krasnogorsk near Moscow in 1993.
Knauf also has operations in Ukraine. It closed its gypsum wallboard plant in Donbass in response to the current war on 24 February 2022 ‘as a precaution,’ according to the TZ newspaper. The staff were sent home and the plant will remain closed into further notice. The plant had 589 employees at the end of 2021, none of whom where German nationals.
Chiyoda Ute’s revenue remains stable to third quarter
09 February 2022Japan: Chiyoda Ute’s revenue remained stable at US$165m in the first nine months of its financial year to 31 December 2021. Its net profit grew by 53% year-on-year to US$5.37m from US$3.52m in the same period in 2020. The gypsum wallboard producer reported that domestic house building had grown from March to December 2021 in tandem with a relaxation in coronavirus health measures from September 2021. It said that national gypsum wallboard shipping volumes grew by 2.4% to 344Mm2 in the nine months to 31 December 2021. It added that due to the capital and business alliance it started with Knauf Group in January 2020 it viewed its future prospects as ‘competitive.’ In late 2019 the Germany-based construction materials company increased its shareholding in Chiyoda Ute to 45% from 26%.
Spain: Knauf has received a 30 year extension to its quarrying permit supporting its Escuzar wallboard plant in Granada. The company also plans to increase production capacity at the unit, according to Europa Press. The plant was established in 2008 and it has a capacity of 50Mm2/yr.
Knauf Tunisia keen to grow business
20 January 2022Tunisia: Elizabeth Knauf has expressed Knauf’s interest in growing its production capacity for the local market and export. The group president of the board of directors met with Prime Minister Najla Bouden in mid-January 2022, according to the Agence Tunis Afrique Presse. Bouden praised the success of Knauf Tunisia’s training centres at Tataouine and Meknassy (Sidi Bouzid). The group acquired Plâtres Tunisiens in 2004 and operates a plaster plant at Meknassy.
Knauf becomes founding member of Institute for Technologies and Economics of Lithium
19 November 2021Germany: Knauf Gips has partnered with Canada-based lithium hydroxide producer Rock Tech Lithium and waste management company Papenburg Entsorgung Ost to found the Institute for Technologies and Economics of Lithium (ITEL) at Halle (Saale) in Saxony-Anhalt. The institute aims to develop an inter-sector, CO2-neutral recycling economy for lithium in Germany. This will include the use of gypsum from lithium hydroxide production in gypsum wallboard production. ITEL has appointed Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg academics Ulrich Blum and Ralf Wehrspohn as its managing directors.
ITEL said “The switch to electromobility will make Germany the central location for battery production in Europe and thus also for the production of the crucial precursor lithium hydroxide. The reduction and reuse of the by-products generated during the refinement of lithium is the focus of the institute's work. Another focus is research into new production steps to optimise by-product value creation.”
Boral completes sale of stake in USG Boral to Knauf
08 April 2021Australia: Boral has sold its 50% stake in USG Boral to Germany-based Knauf for US$1.02bn. The profit on sale after tax will go towards reducing the group’s net debt by 21% to US$1.15bn from US$1.45bn. This will leave a US$763,000 surplus for reinvestment or return to investors.
Following on from the sale, Boral has launched a share buy-back, ending in April 2022. It intends to purchase 10% of shares on issue. The group says that the USG Boral sale proceeds will fund the investment.
Chief executive officer and managing director Zlatko Todorcevski said “The sale of our 50% interest in USG Boral to Knauf for an attractive premium creates substantial value for Boral’s shareholders. The sale enables Boral to reduce net debt to our current target and create surplus capital available for return to shareholders, which is consistent with Boral’s financial framework.” He added “We believe that an on-market buy-back is the most effective method of returning this surplus capital to our shareholders.”
Boral details Knauf USG Boral deal
30 November 2020Australia: Boral has given details of its US$1.02bn sale of the 50% stake in USG Boral to Germany-based Knauf. It said that it expects the transaction to close in the 2021 financial year, adding, “If the transaction has not closed by 30 September 2021 – where Knauf has not completed certain divestments required by regulators – then, if either party terminates, Knauf must pay Boral a termination fee of US$50.0m.”
Chief executive officer (CEO) and managing director Zlatko Todorcevski said, “We have been working with Knauf for some time to find the best path forward for the business following Knauf’s acquisition of our joint venture partner USG. We recognise that it makes sense for Knauf – being the world’s largest plasterboard player – to have 100% ownership of the business. USG Boral is a great business, and very well positioned to perform strongly under the ownership of Knauf. The strength of the joint venture business and its prospects are fully reflected in the sale price as demonstrated by the attractive premium, which is a great outcome for Boral shareholders. The sale of Boral’s interest in USG Boral to Knauf will be a step to simplifying Boral’s geographic footprint and product portfolio.”
Final cash proceeds “will be applied to reduce net debt and fund growth investment in the retained portfolio” and remain subject to “post-completion adjustments.”
Etex agrees to buy Knauf Australia
27 November 2020Australia: Belgium-based Etex has agreed to buy Knauf Australia from Germany-based Knauf for an undisclosed sum. The company’s portfolio consists of three gypsum wallboard plants, located in Altona, Victoria, Matraville, New South Wales and Bundaberg, Queensland, and it employs over 300 people. The Australian newspaper has reported that Etex plans to treat the newly acquired asset as a going concern, in which it will retain existing staff, including management. The acquisition is subject to customary closing conditions, with finalisation expected in early 2021.
Paul Van Oyen, the chief executive officer (CEO) of Etex said, “This transaction is a major milestone in the execution of our strategic roadmap initiated two years ago. Since then, we progressively exited non-core activities, such as the clay and concrete roof tiles business, that no longer fits with our portfolio. Our strategy is focused on being a leader in lightweight solutions and modular construction, offering sustainable, cost-effective, high-performing and inspiring building solutions to our customers. Plasterboards play a key role in such solutions, and we are looking forward to collaborating closely with our new colleagues to open up new opportunities for growth.”
Etex previously acquired Lafarge’s European and South American gypsum wallboard assets at the same time as Knauf acquired the entity now known as Knauf Australia from Lafarge in 2011. Knauf maintains a presence in the Australian gypsum wallboard sector via its partnership with Boral, concluded in October 2020.