Gypsum industry news
USG reduces loss to US$126m in 2012
06 February 2013US: USG Corporation (USG) has reported its results for the fourth quarter of 2012 and for the year as a whole. These results showed that sales had increased by 12% to US$815m in the final quarter of the year, but that USG also made an operating loss of US$8m. This, however, was lower than the US$43m that it lost in the final quarter of 2011. The group's adjusted operating profit was US$5m, versus a US$38m adjusted operating loss in the 2011 quarter, but it made a net loss of US$13m. This compares favourably to the 2011 quarter, when it made a loss of US$100m.
In terms of sales, its US gypsum wallboard shipments came to 1.22Bnft2 against 1.09Bnft2 in the 2011 quarter. The average price was US$132.26/1000ft2 up from US$112.59/1000ft2 in the same period of 2011. USG also announced that its SHEETROCK Brand UltraLight Panels accounted for 49% of all of its US wallboard shipments for the period.
The Corporation recorded full year 2012 net sales from continuing operations of US$3.2bn, an operating profit from continuing operations of US$73m and a net loss of US$126m. For the full year 2011, net sales from continuing operations were US$2.9bn, the operating loss from continuing operations was US$206m and its net loss was US$390m.
"Our wallboard results were the strongest we have seen in over three years, and we achieved our fourth consecutive quarter of positive adjusted operating profit," said James S Metcalf, Chairman, President and CEO. "The results show that commercial markets remain choppy, but we continue to see signs of a housing recovery."
US gypsum production increases by 11% in 2012
31 January 2013US: Gypsum production in the US has increased by 11% to 9.9Mt in 2012 compared to 8.9Mt in 2011, according to a report from the United States Geological Survey (USGS). The USGS attributed this rise to increases in activity in the US housing and construction markets.
In its Mineral Commodity Summary for Gypsum in 2012, the USGS reported that the apparent consumption of gypsum increased by 4% to 24.6Mt in 2012 compared to 23.7Mt in 2011. Wallboard products sold rose slightly from 1.60BM2 in 2011 to 1.63BM2 in 2012. Overall, 47 companies produced gypsum in the US at 54 mines and plants in 34 States. Approximately 90% of domestic consumption, with a total of approximately 22Mt, was accounted for by manufacturers of wallboard and plaster products. At the beginning of 2012 the production capacity of operating wallboard plants in the US was about 3.07BM2/yr.
In its overview of the industry the report commented that the US ranked fourth in the world for gypsum production after China, Iran and Spain. An increased use of wallboard in Asia, coupled with new gypsum product plants, spurred increased production in that region. The report expected that the worldwide production of gypsum would rise driven by the increasing popularity of wallboard due to its economy and efficiency.
Lastly, it was noted that if the construction of wallboard plants designed to use synthetic gypsum from flue gas desulfurisation (FGD) units continues this will result in less mining of natural gypsum. The availability of inexpensive natural gas, however, may limit the increase of future FGD units and, therefore, the production of synthetic gypsum.
Drywall Safety Act approved
09 January 2013US: Legislation intended to better regulate the use of wallboard in homes and buildings is headed to the desk of US President Barack Obama, several years after the emergence of the 'toxic' Chinese wallboard saga.
The US House of Representatives approved the Drywall Safety Act of 2012 on 1 January 2013, amid the chaos regarding the 'fiscal cliff.' It approved the measure on an overwhelming 378-37 vote.
In December 2012 Senator David Vitter successfully pushed a Senate amendment to loosen some of the bill's language and to win the support of the National Association of Home Builders, which had previously opposed the bill. Once the bill was amended, it sailed to congressional approval.
"Many families were faced with the nightmare of building or repairing their homes with toxic wallboard after Hurricane Katrina and I want to make sure this doesn't happen again. This is good news for homeowners that we were able to pass this swiftly before the new Congress starts," said Vitter on 2 January 2013. "This legislation will make sure unsafe wallboard won't be sold in the future and that wallboard manufacturers are held accountable."
The Drywall Safety Act sets chemical standards for domestic and imported wallboard, and also establishes guidelines for its disposal. The bill allows the Consumer Product Safety Commission to set rules to ensure that existing 'toxic' wallboard is properly disposed of. The legislation also requires all wallboard used in the country to be labeled with the manufacturer's name.
USG denies wallboard price fix claims
20 December 2012US: On 13 December 2012 USG Corporation, its subsidiary United States Gypsum Company and seven other wallboard manufacturers were named as defendants in a purported class action complaint filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois by Sierra Drywall Systems, on behalf of itself and others similarly situated.
The complaint alleges, among other things, that the defendants unlawfully conspired to fix the price for gypsum wallboard sold in the United States through price increases for the years 2012 and 2013 and the elimination of job quotes. USG believes that the suit is without merit and has denied that it participated in any alleged conspiracy or has engaged in unlawful conduct.
National Gypsum fires up CHP unit in New Jersey
16 November 2012US: National Gypsum and Recycled Energy Development (RED) has announced the opening of a combined heat and power (CHP) project at National Gypsum's Burlington, New Jersey, facility. The project produces approximately 3.4MW of electricity and delivers more than 30MMBtu/hr of thermal energy, resulting in an overall efficiency of greater than 90%.
"CHP is benefitting our company's bottom line," said John Corsi, vice president of Manufacturing Operations and Engineering at National Gypsum. "This facility allows National Gypsum to further strengthen our competitiveness, increase our reliability, as well as improve our environmental stewardship."
RED's cogeneration system provides power and thermal energy to National Gypsum's wallboard production facility, reducing its costs, energy-intensity, and greenhouse-gas emissions. The system captures excess heat from the gas turbine's combustion and uses it within the board dryer to dry wallboard.
The project benefitted from a US$1.3m competitive grant administered by New Jersey's Economic Development Authority and Board of Public Utilities.
Eagle Materials gypsum business continues to recover
02 November 2012US: Eagle Materials has reported a rise in revenue of 22% to US$165m for the quarter that ended on 30 September 2012. Previously the company reported $135m for the same period in 2011. Eagle also reported a rise in net earnings of 66% to US$18m in the second quarter of 2012 from US$6.03m in 2011.
The North American building materials producer's Gypsum Wallboard business benefited in the quarter from higher wallboard average net sales prices and higher gypsum wallboard sales volumes. Revenue for the Gypsum Wallboard business increased by 34% to US$77.3m from US$51m. Operating earnings increased to US$16.5m from a loss of US$2.54m in the same quarter in 2011. Wallboard sales volumes increased by 24% to 500MMSF from 403MMSF.
In September 2012 Eagle entered into a definitive agreement with Lafarge North America to purchase Lafarge's Sugar Creek, Missouri and Tulsa, Oklahoma cement plants, as well as related assets, for its cement business. The purchase price was US$446m. The acquisition is expected to close by December 2012.
USG reduces loss by US$86m in Q3
22 October 2012US: USG Corporation has reduced its net loss in the third quarter of 2012 by US$86m, to US$29m from US$115 in the same quarter in 2011.
In August 2012 USG announced it had entered into an agreement to sell its European operations to Knauf. Results from European operations have been reported as discontinued operations for the 2012 and 2011 periods.
The corporation reported a year-on-year rise in its net sales from continuous operations of 9% in the third quarter of 2012, to US$828m from US$763m. Its operating profit from continuing operations for the third quarter of 2012 was US$29m compared to a US$79m operating loss in 2011.
Discontinued or European operations reported net sales of US$27m in the third quarter of 2012 compared to US$29m in 2011. Discontinued operating profit was US$1m in 2012 compared to US$3m.
"The announced sale of our European operations is another great example of USG's Plan to Win. Completion of this sale will allow us to reallocate assets from a lower-growth market to joint ventures supporting higher-growth markets in India, which will allow us to diversify the company's earnings and offset some of the cyclicality in our core businesses," said, president and CEO, James S Metcalf, Chairman. Metcalf added that wallboard demand remains 'significantly' below previous levels.
USG wallboard shipments rose by 14% year-on-year in the third quarter of 2012, to 366Mm2 from 320Mm2 in 2011. Sheetrock brand UltraLight panels accounted for 47% of all USG wallboard shipments in the United States.
Progress Energy Florida to contract all synthetic gypsum to USG
01 October 2012US: From the start of 2013 Progress Energy Florida has contracted to sell its entire output of synthetic gypsum produced at its Crystal River Energy Complex in Florida to United States Gypsum (USG).
Crystal River 4 and Crystal River 5, the two newest coat burners at the energy complex, produce 450,000t/yr of synthetic gypsum. Scrubbers were added to Crystal River plants 4 and 5 in 2009 and early 2010. Currently the byproduct is sold for use in making wallboard, cement and fertiliser.
A conveyor belt will be constructed to move the material from the Crystal River power complex to USG's adjacent property. USG purchased the 72ha site in 2011. It announced at the time it would be a storage facility to warehouse synthetic gypsum from the power plants.
Spokesman Scott Sutton from Duke Energy, owner of Progress Energy, emphasised that contract is for USG to take the synthetic gypsum to their property and store it until they ship it or use it. "One customer will remove it all; if we produce more they will have to take it and we have to produce a certain amount. It is a good deal for both of us."
"It is still pretty early in the process yet," said USG spokesman Bob Williams, referring to the plans for the Crystal River property. "It has gone beyond the design stage but construction has not started yet. It is not expected to be complete until sometime in 2013." He added that Crystal River will only be a transfer site and USG has no near-term plans to build a manufacturing plant at the site.
New board member for USG
27 September 2012US: USG Corporation (USG) has announced the election of Matthew Carter Jr. to its board of directors. Carter will serve on the Audit and Governance committees of the USG board of directors. With his addition, USG's board now includes nine independent directors.
Carter is President, Sprint Global Wholesale & Emerging Solutions at Sprint Nextel Corporation. His leadership and experience spans more than 20 years across diverse industries with major companies such as Bristol Myers, Coca-Cola and Leap Wireless. Heavily involved in the telecommunications sector through his career, Carter holds a bachelor's degree from Northwestern University and a master of business administration from Harvard Business School.
"We are pleased to welcome Matt Carter to our board," said Jim Metcalf, chairman of the board, president and CEO of USG Corporation. "His history of leadership, vision, innovation and business transformation will be valuable assets as USG continues to create its own recovery and emerge as a stronger company."
US judge rules that Taishan must face US lawsuits
13 September 2012US: A US federal judge has ruled that Taishan Gypsum Co, a Chinese wallboard manufacturer, must face claims over its allegedly tainted product, which has been blamed for causing foul odours, the failure of appliances and health problems. The ruling means homeowners will be able to pursue claims against the Chinese firm in US courts, increasing the pressure for a settlement similar to that reached between plaintiffs and Knauf in 2011.
Judge Eldon Fallon of New Orleans denied motions by Taishan to dismiss four lawsuits filed by homeowners whose properties were allegedly affected by faulty drywall. Fallon also denied a request by Taishan to vacate a US$2.6m default judgment that he levied against the company in May 2010 after it had failed to make appearances in one of the cases. The ruling is the latest victory for plaintiffs in hundreds of drywall lawsuits that have been consolidated in the New Orleans federal court.
After Fallon entered the US$2.6m judgment against Taishan, the company's lawyers made appearances in the case and argued that the court lacked personal jurisdiction over the company because of its lack of contacts with the United States.
"We believe that the court was in error for all the reasons reflected in our papers and discussed at the hearing," said Joe Cyr, an attorney for Taishan.