2009 global cement consumption stabilization followed by 2010 recovery
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Portland Cement Association
World cement consumption is expected to decline 1.7 percent in 2009, a modest
drop cushioned by a roughly 4.0 percent growth in utilization by China and
India. According to a recent PCA report, gains in those two nations, which
together account for 58 percent of the world’s cement consumption, will mask
the harsh downturns predicted for many of the global cement markets. Among
developing economies, consumption is anticipated to decline nearly 16 percent
during 2009.
Although world governments are engaged in massive stimulus programs, early projects most likely will be low in cement intensities. Jobs such as bridge work, which has higher cement intensities but longer design times, will materialize full force in 2010,when worldwide cement consumption will yield a 3.7 percent gain. “The magnitude of the global economic stimulus programs currently under way is unprecedented,” says PCA Chief Economist Ed Sullivan. “This is concentrated, however, in developed countries. Emerging economies, with the exception of China and India, are expected to lag one year behind.”
Sullivan
expects global consumption figures to reach 2.65 billion metric tons in 2009,
down from 2.7 billion in 2008. To gauge how drastic and rapid the world
economic decline is, in Sullivan’s October 2007 global forecast, he had
anticipated cement consumption in the neighborhood of 2.82 billion metric tons
by 2008. In his current report, Sullivan predicts continued worldwide growth
rates of 7.7 percent (to 2.96 billion metric tons) and 6.9 percent (3.17
billion metric tons) in 2011 and 2012, respectively.
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