Spanish Cement industry seeks government aid
Published by David Bizley,
Editor
World Cement,
This story was sourced from Reuters.
Cement sales in Spain fell by 16.5% in the first half of this year, according to cement industry association Oficemen, a slump that shows how hard the construction industry and the broader economy have been hit by the coronavirus crisis.
The Bank of Spain has forecast that the euro zone’s fourth largest economy would contract by 9 – 11% in 2020.
The cement data, which indicates the impact on the real estate and infrastructure sectors that account for 14% of Spain’s economy, showed the industry needed help, Oficemen’s director general Aniceto Zaragoza told Reuters.
“We have urgent needs in every field of infrastructure, and some, like the need to overhaul our water sanitation system, are especially significant,” Zaragoza said, adding that the country also needed more hospitals and public housing.
“The government must invest in vital social infrastructures like transport and housing, with the help of EU funding and public-private collaboration,” he said.
Sales in June picked up slightly compared to May but Garcia Brosa attributed that to two extra working days in the month rather than the start of a real recovery.
Spain was one of the European countries hardest-hit by the coronavirus crisis, with a strict, three-month lockdown. Cases are on the rise again in parts of Catalonia where authorities have in recent days told people to stay at home.
Reporting by Clara-Laeila Laudette; Editing by Ingrid Melander and Edmund Blair.
Click here to access the original article on Reuters.
Read the article online at: https://www.worldcement.com/europe-cis/21072020/spanish-cement-industry-seeks-government-aid/
You might also like
CRISIL project cement demand in India to grow 7-8% this fiscal year
Cement demand is set to grow slower at 7 – 8% on-year to 475 million t (MT) this fiscal, after clocking a compound annual growth rate of 11% between fiscals 2022 and 2024.