Chile: Germany’s Knauf plans to invest US$11m towards increasing the rate of gypsum extraction at a quarry its subsidiary Yesos Andinos operates at the Rubí deposit, in in San José del Maipo, Cordillera Province. The company said in an Environmental Impact Study (EIA) that it wants to raise extraction to 0.4Mt/yr, according to ValorFuturo. At present it is restricted to 35,000t/yr at the site.
Knauf signs gas deal with Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation
Tanzania: Knauf Gypsum Tanzania has signed a five-year agreement with the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) to supply gas for a gypsum plant it is building at Kisemvule, Mkuranga District. The arrangement will started at the end of 2020, according to the Daily News newspaper. Commissioning at the plant is expected to start at the end of August 2019.
USG-Boral will resume control of Australasian gypsum wallboard operations
Australia/US: USG-Boral will resume 100% ownership of its Australia and New Zealand gypsum wallboard operations, subject to a call option for Knauf to buy back 50% within five years.
Boral CEO Michael Kane has commended Boral’s Sheetrock brand’s substantially strengthened position by comparison to that at the time of Knauf’s US$7bn acquisition of USG in April 2019, since which time Knauf has held 50% of USG-Boral’s gypsum wallboard business in Australia and New Zealand.
Boral will continue its joint operations with Knauf across Asia, at the centre of which are USG-Boral Asia’s purchase of Knauf Asian Plasterboard for US$533m, and its sale of its Middle Eastern ventures to Knauf for US$50m.
Gypsum Resources files for bankruptcy
US: Gypsum Resources has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy at the Nevada US Bankruptcy Court. It is aiming to reorganise the business amid financial and operational difficulties, according to the Las Vegas Reiew Journal newspaper. The company operates a gypum mine at Blue Diamond Hill but it has been trying to develop a residential housing project at the site for over a decade. The development has been opposed by local environmentalists.
Company president James Rhodes blamed the bankrupty decision on ambitious growth plans, disrupted mining operations due to equipment failure and bad weather. He was optimistic that market demand for gypsum is steady and that the company will report positive net income later in 2019. The mine supplies gypsum to the wallboard, cement and agricultural industries.


