LafargeHolcim | |
Type | Public |
Industry | Building materials |
Predecessors | |
Founded | 10 July 2015 |
Headquarters | Zug, Switzerland |
Number of locations | 2,315 operating sites [1] |
Key people | Jan Jenisch (CEO) Beat W. Hess (Chairman) |
Products | Cement, aggregates, concrete, and other building materials |
Revenue | 26.7 Bn CHF (2019) [2] |
Number of employees | 72,452 (2019) [3] |
Website | www |
LafargeHolcim (legally known as Holcim Ltd. since 2021) [4] is a French-Swiss multinational company that manufactures building materials. It has a presence in around 70 countries, and employs around 72,000 employees. LafargeHolcim operates four businesses segments: cement, aggregates, ready-mix concrete, and other solutions and products, including precast concrete, asphalt, mortar and building solutions.[ buzzword ]
LafargeHolcim was formed by the merger on 10 July 2015, of cement companies Lafarge and Holcim, which had combined sales of CHF 26.7 billion in 2019. [5] In the 2020 Forbes Global 2000, LafargeHolcim was ranked as the 280th -largest public company in the world. [6]
On 7 April 2014, Lafarge and Holcim announced a merger project to create LafargeHolcim. With a combined market value exceeding $50 billion, the merger was the second largest announced worldwide in 2014. [7] On 10 July 2015, Lafarge and Holcim completed the merger and created LafargeHolcim. [8] On 15 July 2015, the new LafargeHolcim Group was officially launched. [9]
In June 2016, Le Monde reported that Lafarge paid taxes to ISIS middlemen in 2013 to 2014 to keep using their factory in Jalabiya, Northeastern Syria. [10] [11] [12] On 2 March 2017, the Board of Directors of LafargeHolcim issued a statement [13] indicating that the measures required to continue operations at the plant were unacceptable.
A comprehensive and independent investigation revealed significant errors in judgment that were inconsistent with the company's code of conduct and the company took action. There have been significant changes and developments made to the compliance program and infrastructure since the time of the alleged misconduct.
The former CEO, Eric Olsen, resigned in April 2017 because of the "strong tensions" incurred by the news. [14] However, an investigation conducted by Baker McKenzie concluded Olsen was not responsible for the payments. [15]
In an interview with the French newspapers LeFigaro, Beat Hess, Chairman of the Board said: "Unacceptable errors were made that the Group regrets and condemns. It's far easier to say this in hindsight but the Group certainly pulled out of Syria too late. All of this should have been avoided” [16]
Meanwhile, Sherpa filed a lawsuit against Lafarge over the payments. [17] In March 2017, French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault criticized LafargeHolcim for competing to build the wall on the border of Mexico–United States border promised by President Donald Trump. [18] They were also criticised by presidential candidate Emmanuel Macron. [19]
In May 2017, Jan Jenisch was appointed as the new CEO of LafargeHolcim Group. In March 2018, Jan Jenisch announced a new strategy, Strategy 2022 – ‘Building for Growth’, which aims to drive profitable growth and simplify the business to deliver resilient returns and attractive value to stakeholders.
In May 2018, LafargeHolcim announced the next steps in the simplification of corporate organization. The corporate management positions in Switzerland will be moved to the company's Holderbank site and a new corporate office in Zug. [20]
During the summer, in July 2019, LafargeHolcim introduced Plants of Tomorrow, a four-year program that will see the utilization of automation technologies and robotics, artificial intelligence, predictive maintenance and digital-twin technologies across their entire cement production process. [21]
In August 2019, the firm announced a "commercial breakthrough for low-carbon cement", Solidia Concrete, which "reduces the overall carbon footprint in precast concrete by 70%". [22] [23]
Later in the year, in Fall 2019, LafargeHolcim announced the allocation of 160 million Swiss francs ($161 million) on 80 projects across Europe to cut annual emissions from its cement manufacturing processes by 15% by 2022. [24]
In September 2020, LafargeHolcim joins the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) “Business Ambition for 1.5°C” [25] becoming the first global building materials company to sign the pledge with intermediate targets for 2030, validated by SBTi. [26]
On May 4 2021, shareholders voted on changing the company name from LafargeHolcim Ltd to Holcim Ltd. [27]
The company new identity Holcim was launched on July 8, 2021. [28] This name change applies only to the Group company name with all market brands remaining in existence.
LafargeHolcim operates in around seventy countries, and focuses on cement, aggregates, ready mix and solutions[ buzzword ] & products. LafargeHolcim is a global partner for major infrastructure projects – roads, mines, ports, dams, data centers, stadiums, wind farms, or electric power plants that require major investments.
The group employs around 70,000 people around the world, and reach a combined net sales of CHF 26.7 billion in 2019. [29] The group's central functions had been divided between Zurich and Paris until the end of 2018, but are currently being transferred to the Swiss cities of Holderbank and Zug. [30] The company's research facilities are in l'Isle d'Abeau, near Lyon, France.
Headquartered in Switzerland and listed on the SIX Swiss Exchange and on Euronext Paris, LafargeHolcim holds leading positions in all regions across the globe. The building materials market is driven by massive global population growth, the shift towards city and urban living [31] and the infrastructure, the highways, bridges, hospitals and schools, that growing populations require.
Jan Jenisch took over as CEO of LafargeHolcim on 1 September 2017. [32] Beat Hess is the chairman of the Board of Directors.
Members of the Executive Committee are formally appointed by the Board of Directors: [33]
On 15 October 2019, Jan Jenisch was appointed to the board of the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD). [35]
Main competitors:
CRH plc is an international group of diversified building materials businesses, with headquarters in Dublin, Ireland. It manufactures and supplies a wide range of products for the construction industry. The group was formed through a merger in 1970 of two leading Irish public companies, Cement Limited and Roadstone Limited (1949). CRH has a primary listing on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index. It has secondary listings on the Euronext Dublin and New York Stock Exchange.
The Rinker Group was an Australian-headquartered multinational building products company. Prior to its acquisition by Cemex, it was listed on both the Australian Securities Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange.
Holcim was a Swiss-based global building materials and aggregates company. The company merged on 10 July 2015 to form LafargeHolcim as the new company.
ACC Limited is one of the largest producers of cement in India. It is a subsidiary of LafargeHolcim. On 1 September 2006, the name of The Associated Cement Companies Limited was changed to ACC Limited. Acc Limited had been established in Mumbai, Maharashtra on 1 August 1936.
Thomas Schmidheiny is a Swiss billionaire businessman, and the former chairman of cement manufacturer Holcim.
Blue Circle Industries was a British public company manufacturing cement. It was founded in 1900 as the Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers Ltd through the fusion of 24 cement works, mostly around on the Thames and Medway estuaries, together having around a 70% market share of the British cement market. In 1911, the British Portland Cement Manufacturers Ltd was formed by the addition of a further 35 companies, creating a company with an initial 80% of the British cement market.
Tarmac Group Limited was a British building materials company headquartered in Wolverhampton, United Kingdom. It produced road surfacing and heavy building materials including aggregates, concrete, cement and lime, as well as operating as a road construction and maintenance subcontractor.
Aggregate Industries, a member of LafargeHolcim, is a company based in the United Kingdom with headquarters at Bardon Hill, Coalville, Leicestershire. Aggregate Industries manufactures and supplies a range of heavy building materials, primarily aggregates such as stone, asphalt and concrete, to the construction industry and other business sectors. Aggregate Industries also manufactures and imports cement, and provides a range of aggregate-associated goods and services, these include the manufacture of masonry and reconstructed stone items for construction industry and domestic applications, the manufacture of pre-cast concrete items, the supply of ready mixed concrete, design and project management consulting, and resurfacing contracting services.
Bamburi Cement Limited is an industrial company in Kenya specialising in cement and concrete. The company has operations in Bamburi suburb of Mombasa, it is headquartered in Nairobi and its stock is listed on the Nairobi Securities Exchange.
Société Nationale d'Investissement (SNI) or Al Mada, is a large private Moroccan holding company mainly owned by the Moroccan royal family. Headquartered in Casablanca (Morocco), the company was established in 1966. SNI operates in different fields such as banking, telecommunication, renewable energy businesses and food industry among others.
Hima Cement Limited (HCL) is a cement manufacturer in Uganda. It is a subsidiary of LafargeHolcim, a building materials manufacturer headquartered in Switzerland, with subsidiaries in over 80 countries.
The LafargeHolcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction is a non-profit organization. Its goal is to raise awareness of the role that architecture, engineering, urban planning and construction have in achieving a sustainable built future. The organization encourages and rewards sustainable responses to the technological, environmental, socioeconomic, and cultural issues affecting building and construction. The two main initiatives of the Foundation are the LafargeHolcim Forums and the LafargeHolcim Awards.
Tarmac is a British building materials company headquartered in Solihull, England. The company was formed as Lafarge Tarmac in March 2013, by the merger of Anglo American's Tarmac UK and Lafarge's operations in the United Kingdom. In July 2014, Anglo American agreed to sell its stake to Lafarge, to assist Lafarge in its merger with Holcim and allay competition concerns.
Bruno Lafont is a French businessman. He served as the chief executive officer of Lafarge from 2006 to 2015, when it merged with Holcim to become LafargeHolcim. He served as the co-chairman of LafargeHolcim from 2015 to April 2017.
Lafarge S.A. was a French industrial company specialising in three major products: cement, construction aggregates, and concrete. It was founded in 1833 by Joseph-Auguste Pavin de Lafarge.
Eric Olsen is an American-French business executive. He served as the Chief Executive Officer of LafargeHolcim, a construction public corporation, until 2017.
Karen Louise Scrivener is a material chemist known for her pioneering works in cementitious materials. She is the head of Laboratory of Construction Materials at Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne and served as the Editor-in Chief of the Cement and Concrete Research journal for 15 years.
Lafarge Africa Plc is a cement manufacturer headquartered in Lagos and quoted on the Nigerian Stock Exchange. It is majorly controlled by LafargeHolcim. Previously trading under the name of Lafarge Wapco Plc, the merger of Lafarge and Holcim and resulting consolidation of Lafarge's assets in Nigeria and South Africa resulted in the name change to Lafarge Africa.
Mariam Kamara is a Nigerien architect. Her designs focus on open living spaces and make use of locally produced materials available to African communities: cement, recycled metal and raw earth.