Gypsum industry news
Saint-Gobain buys remaining share of Seven Hills Paperboard
11 October 2023US: Saint-Gobain has acquired the remaining equity interest and assets of Seven Hills Paperboard, including a gypsum paper board liner manufacturing plant in Lynchburg, Virginia, from its joint venture partner WestRock. The purchase adds to the gypsum wallboard operations of Saint-Gobain’s CertainTeed Interior Products Group. The company said that the internal integration of gypsum paper board liner production represented a “significant” step in strengthening the supply chain for this material.
Mark Rayfield, President and Chief Executive Officer of Saint-Gobain North America and CertainTeed Canada said “The acquisition of these assets represents our continued commitment to our customers to provide quality gypsum wallboard products.” He added, “I would like to welcome our 80 new team members in Lynchburg and look forward to your contributions to our purpose, ‘To Make the World a Better Home.”
China: The Ministry of Justice has returned a lawsuit in which thousands of US homeowners say a 'cabinet-level' agency should pay for damage to their homes from alleged defective wallboard made in China. The ministry says it won't serve the legal papers because the agency is immune to such lawsuits and the legal service would infringe upon China's sovereignty.
US District Judge Eldon Fallon has ruled that Taishan Gypsum Company must pay for damages from the wallboard it made. The judge is considering damages for up to 4000 homeowners in six states. The brief letter from Beijing became part of the court record this week, about 21 months after lawyers for the homeowners sued the state-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, which oversees 117 state-owned companies. It was dated 8 April 2016.
Fallon ruled in 2010 that Taishan's wallboard emitted sulphur gas that damaged the homes of seven 'bellwether' plaintiffs from Virginia, making occupants ill, corroding copper, silver and other metals, damaging appliances and electronics, and stinking up the houses so they were "hard if not impossible to live in." The other states involved in the lawsuit include Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas, according to Associated Press.