BUCECO | |
Industry | Cement |
Founded | 2008 |
Headquarters | , Burundi |
The Burundi Cement Company, or BUCECO, is a cement manufacturer in Cibitoke, Burundi.
The Burundi Cement Company was founded by Tribert Rujugiro Ayabatwa. [1] An agreement signed on 3 April 2008 gave the company tax and customs advantages. [2] It began production in January 2011, the only cement company in Burundi. It produced 34,500 tons of cement in 2011 and 70,500 tons in 2012. By 2013, it employed 80 people, and the factory was expected to reach its current capacity of 100,000 tons later in the year. The company was already looking at starting a new plant. [1]
The tax and customs agreement was amended on 23 May 2016 and on 21 January 2020. [2] In September 2020 the Minister of Commerce made a surprise visit to the BUCECO plant. In November 2020 it was reported that the official price of a 50 kilograms (110 lb) bag of 32.5 cement was 24,500 BIF, but the actual price was 30,000 BIF at some points of sale in different provinces. The ministry warned cement traders that sanctions would be placed on them if they charged above the official price. [3]
In January 2022 the Ministry of Commerce asked Buceco to suspend its unilateral increase in the price of its products. The company should consult with the Ministry of Commerce and base the revised price on production cost, profit margin and production capacity. [2] In August 2022 the Burundi government said they were preparing to allow import of cement and sugar to keep prices down. Burundi Cement Company asked for a price review before imports were allowed. It said the prices should be allowed to rise to cover higher costs for raw materials and transport. [4]
In October 2022 Burundi Breweries (BRARUDI) and Burundi Cement Company (BUCECO) announced prices increases that they blamed on rising costs of raw materials and energy. The Observatory for the Fight against Corruption and Economic Malpractice (OLUCOME) issued a statement that "This general increase in the prices of essential products for Burundians is very worrying. The government of Burundi is called to act quickly because the tendency shows that all domestic products will follow suit." [5] In August 2023 there was another rise in the price of cement, from 28,500 to 38,000 BIF for a bag of 32.5R cement. [6]
The factory was built on land in Cibitoke that had housed the Burundi Tobacco Company (BTC). It was surrounded by a residential area, and the dust and noise pollution became a health hazard. In February 2020 the authorities suggested that the population must settle elsewhere, away from the factory. In February 2021 Déo Guide Rurema, Minister of the Environment, announced that the factory would be moved. Carême Bizoza, governor of Cibitoke Province, welcomed the announcement. [7]
Kirundo Province is one of the eighteen provinces of Burundi, in north of the country bordering Rwanda. The economy is mostly based on agriculture, with a dispersed population and few sizable communities. Before 1970 large parts of the province were forested. Migrants from the south then cleared much of the vegetation to create agricultural land, and Kirundo became the breadbasket of Burundi. The civil war from 1993 to 2005 caused agricultural output to drop by more than half. Since then, lack of farm inputs, poor infrastructure and shortages of water have caused widespread poverty.
Burundi is a producer of columbium (niobium) and tantalum ore, tin ore, and tungsten ore, and some deposits of gold which are designated for export. Burundi has resources of copper, cobalt, nickel, feldspar, phosphate rock, quartzite, and rare reserves of uranium, and vanadium.
Ciments du Katanga is a company in the Democratic Republic of the Congo that makes cement and related products. It was established during the copper boom of the early 1920s to supply the new mining and refining companies, including worker housing and industrial construction.
Tribert Rujugiro Ayabatwa was a Rwandan entrepreneur, best known as the founder of the Pan African Tobacco Group, the largest tobacco company in Africa. In his later years he fell out with Rwandan President Paul Kagame and left the country. Kagame accused him of funding rebel groups and of economic crimes, and tried to get him extradited from Uganda, leading to a rift between the two countries. The government seized and sold his property in Rwanda. Ayabatwa died in April 2024 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
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