Gypsum industry news
New Zealand: The Commerce Commission has said that builders have found it difficult to substitute alternative brands of gypsum wallboard because the building material is commonly specified by brand in building plans. Differences in consenting decisions by local government authorities and quantity-forcing rebates for wallboard have also been identified as making it harder for builders to source supplies. The regulator has been investigating general residential building supplies since November 2021 and made the comments as part of a draft report.
Commission chair Anna Rawlings said “Our preliminary view is that competition for the supply of key building supplies is not working as well as it could, and would be improved if it was easier for building products to be introduced and for competing suppliers to expand their business.”
The draft report has found certain brands of product have become ‘embedded’ in home-building practice in New Zealand and has recommended that the building regulatory system should include competition as a deliberate objective. It added that, in some circumstances, some types of rebates paid by established suppliers to merchants appeared to be reinforcing difficulties faced by competing products. The commission will now take comment on its draft report until September 2022. The final report will be published in December 2022.
Winstone Wallboards’ GIB product range is the main brand of wallboard used in the country. The company is reported to hold around a 95% share of the local market. Wallboard shortages have been reported since mid-2021.
Germany: The German Gypsum Association (GIPS) has welcomed the publication of a government report that took an inventory of natural gypsum deposits. It supports the work as it allows its members to make qualified decisions about future planning. The Federal Commission on Geosciences (BLA-GEO) has created a register of gypsum supplies in the country. The association added that it believes there will be no large-scale alternatives to natural gypsum supplies in the foreseeable future. This is due to low volumes of gypsum recycling and falling production of flue gas desulfurisation (FGD) Gypsum as coal power plants are shut down.
Synthetic gypsum market predicted to reach 220Mt by 2027
28 March 2017UK: Smithers Apex predicts that the global synthetic gypsum market is due to reach 220Mt/yr by 2027 from a 151M/yr in 2017. A new report by the market research company forecasts modest growth in the US, a decline in Europe and growth in China over the next 10 years. At present the current supply of synthetic gypsum is mostly based in theses countries and they accounted for 96% of worldwide supply in 2014.
"The synthetic gypsum industry is at a very interesting and dynamic point in time. The outlook for the next 10 years is positive, but not without threats. Opportunities abound for new applications, coupled with an increased supply. Innovation is coming in the form of research into the raw material," said Robert C Grupe, Jr, the author of the 'Future of Synthetic Gypsum: Market Forecasts to 2027' report.
An example of a major driver of the synthetic gypsum market is government regulations controlling coal-fired power plants. Sustainability requirements for the design and construction of new buildings can also encourage demand for products made with synthetic gypsum.
Worldwide gypsum market to reach value of US$3.8bn by 2023
31 October 2013US/UK: The gypsum market is forecast to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 9.9% to reach approximately US$2.4bn by 2018, and US$3.8bn by 2023, according to a new report by analysts Smithers Apex. 'The Future of Gypsum: Market Forecasts to 2023' reports that 252Mt of gypsum is expected to be consumed in the year 2013, with 31.9% and 62.5% being consumed in the plasterboard and cement industries respectively.
The market study reports that about 75% of gypsum is used in wallboard manufacture in the US and Western Europe. Outside of these regions, Smithers Apex reports that one of the major factors driving gypsum consumption is population growth, particularly in India and China, as developing countries move from traditional wet construction techniques towards dry construction using materials such as prefabricated wallboard. Countries such as China are also encouraging wallboard usage through government policies.
The report also describes how a large portion of the world's gypsum is produced from a very large number of small operations in developing countries. For example, there are as many as 400 mines in Iran and probably more in China. The US ranks fifth globally in raw gypsum production after China, Iran, Iraq and Spain. US crude gypsum production in 2012 grew by 11% to 10.4Mt. In 2012, 10.7Mt of this gypsum was synthetic, and 11Mt was calcined gypsum.
The global financial crisis saw demand for gypsum drop in the construction industry by around 20% in 2008. The decline slowed between 2002 and 2010 and stabilised in 2011. The US and other parts of the world saw a strong recovery period in 2012. The most likely path forward for the US construction industry will be a relatively steady one, that features moderate recovery through 2013 and accelerates in 2014 and beyond.