--Advertisement--

BUA Cement to set up cement, power plants in Adamawa

BUA Cement says it will establish a 3 million metric tonnes cement plant and 50 megawatts power plant in Guyuk and Lamurde local governments of Adamawa state.

Abdul Samad Rabiu, BUA chairman, disclosed this during a courtesy call to Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri, the Adamawa state governor.

Rabiu said preliminary findings show that Guyuk and Lamurde local government are reputed to have a good quality of limestone deposits adding that the company is ready to begin investing in the state.

He added that BUA will use new technologies to supply power to the proposed cement plant and communities of Guyuk and Lamurde in addition to providing 3,000 direct and 5,000 indirect jobs.

Advertisement

The chairman explained that the Guyuk Cement Plant will be the major investment in the north-east by BUA and solicited for the support of Fintiri to set up the factory.

Rabiu said the company has decided to source its raw materials locally and has invested billions of dollars in various sectors across Nigeria and urged the state government to support BUA to actualize the Guyuk Cement project.

In response, Fintiri said his administration’s effort in exploring local contents has started yielding results and thanked BUA for showing interest in establishing the cement plant in Guyuk.

Advertisement

He assured that the government will make whatever is needed and provide the necessary support which will create enabling environment so that the BUA Cement company in Guyuk will become a reality.

He also expressed the readiness of the government to protect the investment once it is established and told them that his administration will maintain a good relationship with the company for the benefit of the state.

BUA is Nigeria’s second-largest cement producer by volume with cement plants in Sokoto and Edo states.

The company’s newest plant in Sokoto is expected to be operational in 2021 and when completed, the Guyuk Cement Plant will bring BUA’s total capacity to 14 million metric tonnes per annum.

Advertisement
Add a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

error: Content is protected from copying.