UK: Plans have been submitted for a gypsum wallboard production facility in Newport, Wales. Put forward by Associated British Ports (ABP), which owns the city’s port, the 15,000m2 plant would be built next to Alexandra Docks. Once complete, the facility would be leased to a manufacturer by ABP.

A design and access statement prepared by Adams Hendry Consulting on behalf of the applicant said, “The manufacturing facility will make an important contribution to the local economy by providing new jobs, including manufacturing and office jobs. “It will generate approximately 70 full-time equivalent (FTE) direct jobs and it is estimated that the facility will support an additional 130 indirect jobs in the supply chain. The facility is expected to operate 24 hours per day over three shifts year-round.”

ABP requested an environmental impact assessment screening opinion for the application in July 2019, although Newport City Council decided in December 2019 that this was not required.

Australia: Boral has announced that it is ‘considering a range of potential options’ regarding its planned resumption of 100% ownership of USG Boral Plasterboard from Germany-based Knauf in light of the fact that the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) is ‘unlikely to approve the call option in relation to the Australia and New Zealand business.’ The call option would have given Knauf the right to return to 50% ownership of USG Boral Plasterboard within five years. The ACCC’s likely intervention in the transaction is believed to have to do with Boral’s financial situation.

Uzbekistan: Knauf has announced plans for a second gypsum wallboard production line in Bukhara, Bukhara region. The plans also include an investment of Euro2.2m in an additional gypsum mixture line at its Bukharagips plant, also in Bukhara, which produces dry building mixes. Trend News has reported that Knauf is currently Uzbekistan’s leading producer of gypsum wallboard, which it sells on the Uzbek, Afghan and Turkmen markets.

Oman: Zawawi Minerals has published a report in which it forecasts 11% year-on-year growth in gypsum exports, to 10.0Mt in 2020 from 9.00Mt in 2019. The report notes that Oman’s consistent supply of gypsum makes it the most important supplier to the Asian and South/East African regions. It contrasts the fitness of the Omani gypsum sector for exports with that of Pakistan, where bilateral trade with neighbouring India has been suspended since 7 August 2019.

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