Gypsum industry news
New Zealand: Winstone Wallboards says it will increase the supply of gypsum wallboard available for distribution by merchants by 1Mm2 from July to September 2022. It said this will equate to a 7 – 8% increase of various types of plasterboard.
Fletcher Building chief executive Ross Taylor said “The increases we will be bringing to market are possible because we will soon commission changes to the configuration of our manufacturing that we have been working on over the past three months which will produce extra, locally produced, volumes. We have also been able to secure and will import additional board from an Australian manufacturer that we can feed into our supply chain.” He added that the allocation model the company has introduced had started to help supply levels and that the completion of the new plant at Tauranga in June 2023 would also help.
In early June 2022 social housing developer Simplicity Living said it had cancelled all of its orders of Fletcher Building Gib board. In an interview with Stuff, Shane Brealey - the managing director of Simplicity Living, said that the company had decided to import wallboard instead. It said it could source equivalent wallboard products at a 20% discount or more. It added that it was taking it eight weeks to import wallboard from South-East Asia compared to eight months from Auckland.
Winstone Wallboards responded to the criticism by saying it previously had been importing wallboard from Etex Australia for around six months until the end of 2021. The arrangement ended as Australia also has a wallboard shortage. However, it added that the import arrangement might restart from August 2022 onwards.
US: Eagle Materials has recorded consolidated sales in its 2022 financial year of US$1.9bn, up by 15% year-on-year. The group’s adjusted earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) was US$657m, up by 15%. Full-year light materials sales totalled US$804m, up by 27%, with gypsum wallboard and paperboard operating earnings of US$274m, up by 42%. The group sold 269Mm2 of gypsum wallboard, up by 3% year-on-year.
President and CEO Michael Haack said "As we look back on another extraordinary year, I am extremely proud of our team's ability to deliver record operating and financial results despite multiple external challenges, including transportation disruptions, supply chain constraints and, of course, continuing to navigate the Covid-19 pandemic.” He added "As we begin our new fiscal year, Eagle is well-positioned, both financially and geographically, to capitalise on the underlying demand fundamentals that are expected to support steady and sustainable construction activity growth over the near and long term. We expect that infrastructure investment should increase in the latter part of our fiscal year, as federal funding from the recently enacted Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act begins in earnest. And, despite recent interest rate increases, housing demand remains strong across our geographies, outpacing the supply of homes. Nonresidential construction activity is also picking up."
Eurogypsum names Jörg Ertle as its new president
29 April 2022Belgium: Eurogypsum’s board of directors has elected Jörg Ertle president of the association. The Etex head of corporate social responsibility will succeed Saint-Gobain Group vice-president for sustainable development Emmanuel Normant, who now takes over the position of Eurogypsum vice-president. Knauf Group Central Europe managing director and Knauf Gips chair Christoph Dorn will serve as the association’ new treasurer.
Ertle studied mining and mineral engineering at RWTH University Aachen and holds a Ph.D in environment technology from Berlin Technical University. He has over 20 years’ gypsum industry experience, including time spent in management roles Lafarge before and after its acquisition by Etex. Having previously headed Etex’s worldwide gypsum sourcing, Ertle took on his current role in the group in 2019. He has also participated in different Eurogypsum working groups concerning raw material policy, and has chaired the association’s Environment and Sustainability Committee since 2018.
Ertle said “I am taking over Eurogypsum’s presidency at a challenging time for Europe, with a global climate and environmental challenge, as well as a particularly unstable international environment. Economic actors are working under increased regulatory and financial pressure.” He added “I am convinced that gypsum solutions are a strong enabler to facilitate this transition, supporting the ambitions of the European Green Deal.”
Mexico: The price of gypsum and its derivatives has risen by up to 12% in April 2022 compared to pre-Russian invasion of Ukraine levels. Along with a rise in the price of other materials, this has increased the cost of new house builds by 25 – 30%.
The Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs has reported that Russia was previously Mexico’s 35th largest trade partner.
New Zealand: David Thomas, the manager of Winstone Wallboard, has reassured the local market that the company is doing as much as it can to maximise supply of its GIB plasterboard brand despite ongoing shortages. He said that the gypsum wallboard producer is operating its Auckland and Christchurch at ‘record’ levels and considering ways to bring forward the manufacture of wallboard at its new plant in Tauranga, which is currently under construction.
He also added that the company is preparing for an allocation process from July 2022 that was previously announced in February 2022. It has provided merchants with the monthly volumes of plasterboard it is forecasting to supply them from July to September 2022. The allocation model is planned as a temporary measure until the completion of the new plant at Tauranga in June 2023. He also asked for the construction sector to working together to schedule delivery of wallboard as close as possible to when it will be installed to further minimise shortages.
ETEX boosts sales and earnings in 2021
04 April 2022Belgium: ETEX recorded consolidated net sales of Euro2.97bn in 2021, up by 14% year-on-year from Euro2.62bn in 2020. Its earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) rose by 12% to Euro522m from Euro468m, while its profit for the year dropped by 1.4% to Euro198m from Euro201m. The group’s building performance recorded like-for-like sales growth of 21% from 2020 levels and of 15% from 2019 levels. Its gypsum wallboard volumes grew year-on-year, while strong demand in all regions except South Africa impacted some export businesses through supply chain issues and increased shipping costs. The company adapted its prices to offset a sharp rise in raw material and energy cost prices.
During the year, ETEX acquired a top-three Australian gypsum wallboard producer and completed its rebranding as Siniat. It also diversified with the launch of a fourth group division, new ways, which includes light steel framing production operations.
Irving Wallboard preparing to rejoin local gas network
04 March 2022Canada: Irving Wallboard is preparing to rejoin the local gas distribution network near to its plant at Saint John in New Brunswick. The company has been offered a special low rate as an incentive to return, according to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. In an interview Gilles Volpé, the vice-president of Liberty Utilities, the operator of New Brunswick's gas distribution network, said that these kinds of arrangements sometimes occurred with industrial end users. The proposed deal would see it use at least 600,000GJ/yr of gas making the wallboard producer Liberty Utilities’s largest customer.
The company, which also operates under the name Atlantic Wallboard, was previously the largest individual customer on New Brunswick's public gas distribution system but it left in 2015 in a pricing dispute. It then switched to using compressed gas delivered by truck.
An application has been made to the New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board and a full hearing into the proposal is scheduled for April 2022.
RiTE Ugljevik to supply 250,000t/yr of gypsum to Beijing New Building Materials’ upcoming Ugljevik gypsum wallboard plant
25 February 2022Bosnia and Herzegovina: State-owned power company RiTE Ugljevik has agreed to supply 250,000t/yr of gypsum for Beijing New Building Materials (BNBM)’s upcoming Ugljevik gypsum wallboard plant in Semberija Region. The power supplier produced 300,000t of flue gas desulphurisation (FGD) gypsum in 2022.
Winstone Wallboards to move to allocation model for GIB plasterboard from July 2022
18 February 2022New Zealand: Winstone Wallboards has decided to move to an allocation model of supplying its GIB plasterboard products from July 2022 due to mounting lead times in manufacture. It said it would, effective immediately, not be accepting or processing new GIB plasterboard orders for July 2022 deliveries onwards. Instead it plans to assess the situation in the coming months and it anticipates moving to a process where customers order plasterboard products one month in advance.
The gypsum wallboard producer blamed the situation on significant disruption across the building industry caused by local-coronavirus-related lockdowns in August and September 2021. It said that this caused a backlog of orders. Subsequent record manufacturing output and imports were insufficient to alleviate the situation.
Turkmenistan government to launch calcite plant in Lebap region
06 January 2022Turkmenistan: The government has announced plans for the construction of a 50,000t/yr calcite plant at Koytendag in Lebap region. Orient News has reported that calcite from the plant will supply regional gypsum wallboard production, which was 4Mm2 in 2021.