Cement News tagged under: Environmental

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Lafarge to install abatement system

14 April 2009, Published under Cement News

Lafarge Cement Zambia has embarked on a further investment of US$2.5m to replace the US$1.5m dust abatement system at its kilns at the Ndola plant. The investment is aimed at eliminating dust emissions in the city. Lafarge Ndola plant manager, Roy Kapesi, said the facilities were old and the company was committed to ensuring that refurbishments were done to bring the plant to the levels of Lafarge international standards. Speaking during the official hand-over of the Lafarge mobile clinic...

Standards authority suspends Abyssinia production, Ethiopia

14 April 2009, Published under Cement News

The Quality and Standards Authority of Ethiopia (QSAE) has temporarily suspended Abyssinia Cement Factory, a private cement manufacturer, from producing cement and sending its products to the market, sources at the authority disclosed. The decision came after the authority found six bags of expired cement in the market, allegedly a brand from Abyssinia Cement Factory. However, owners of the cement factory said the cement the authority alleges is expired was not produced by them, suggesting ...

TXI plant gets operational approvals

09 April 2009, Published under Cement News

The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality voted 2-1 Wednesday to approve a 10-year renewal of Dallas-based TXI’s permit for cement kilns in Midlothian, despite pleas from nearly 200 residents that a public hearing be held first, reports local press. The three-member commission argued briefly over whether they were legally allowed to conduct a hearing on the permit renewal because TXI was not requesting a permit for an increase in plant emissions. The plants have previously been describe...

Soil near Lafarge plant under scrutiny, NY

08 April 2009, Published under Cement News

Concerned about pollution at the Lafarge cement plant in Ravena, New York State Wildlife Pathologist Dr Ward Stone will collect soil samples near the site and test plant and animal life for mercury and 20 other contaminants. The pathologist will begin with soil samples and then analyse leaves, grass, bark and small mammals such as mice, which are particularly informative about localised data because they do not travel over a large area, he said. Source: The Daily Mail

Protesters rally against proposed cement plan, US

07 April 2009, Published under Cement News

People against a proposed cement plant by Titan in Castle Hayne say they will not back down. Carolinas Cement, a subsidiary of Titan America, wants to build a cement plant in New Hanover County, but there has been controversy over the environmental impacts of such a project. Opponents of the plant protested outside the New Hanover County assembly room before the commissioners meeting Monday night. "We want to give environmental agencies due process and enough time to get all the environme...

Lafarge plans UK wind farm

06 April 2009, Published under Cement News


Lafarge plans a wind farm as well as carbon capture and storage in Britain as the energy intensive sector faces an uphill struggle to cut its carbon footprint. 
 

 The company says it is taking the lead for the industry, with Britain setting an ambitious target of cutting carbon emissions by 2050, in addition to a 20 per cent cut by 2020 among EU members. 
"The 80-per cent reduction by 2050 is like climbing up the Mount Everest," Jim Rushworth, UK Lafarge’s Business Sustainabiliby Manage...

Planning needed to avoid ’boom-bust’ cement plant

06 April 2009, Published under Cement News

A new cement plant near Weston will bring social and economic benefits for the Waitaki district but could also cause problems that need to be managed, the local Environment Court has been told.
 In particular, a rapid influx of workers during construction, which would employ up to 430 people at its peak, could be stressful and put pressure on services if not carefully managed, social impact consultant Gerard Fitzgerald said.
 
Planning was needed to avoid a "boom-bust" during the constructi...

Virginia Governor Honors Roanoke Cement Company

03 April 2009, Published under Cement News

Roanoke Cement Company was honored last night with the Governor’s Award for Environmental Excellence for Land Conservation at an event held at the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, VA. The award was presented to the Troutville Plant Manager, Kevin Baird, and Lance Clark, Environmental Manager. The award is given to leaders in the Commonwealth who have made an outstanding contribution toward protecting and conserving the environment and whose actions have benefited the health and we...

Study comes out in favour of Titan Cement, US

01 April 2009, Published under Cement News

A new independent study finds that a proposed cement plant by Titan Cement will not pose a threat to the environment, according to reports from local press. Titan America wants to build a cement plant and rock quarry in Castle Hayne. It could bring more than 100 jobs to the area, but critics are concerned about the impact on the environment from things like mercury pollution. Intertox, a Seattle-based company, reported their independent findings recently that say mercury emissions from the...

Mercury study results for proposed Carolinas cement plant

31 March 2009, Published under Cement News

A study shows that mercury emissions from the proposed Carolinas Cement Plant would pose little risk to the public health of the greater Wilmington area. Intertox, a toxicology company out of Seattle, WA began the study in September 2008.  Carolinas Cement paid for the study, but was not privy to the study’s findings during the process. "Our study concludes that the total estimated dose of mercury a typical resident of Castle Hayne and the Greater Wilmington community could encounter is le...