Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Nigerian property developer Olawale Ayilara is grappling with spiraling costs.He's CEO of LandWey Investment, which is building 12,000 homes across 14 sites in the affluent Lekki district of Lagos ...
Obajana Cement Plc was incorporated in 1992. Dangote Cement Plc is a subsidiary of Dangote Group and is the largest company traded on the Nigerian Stock Exchange. [5] Dangote Cement listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange in October 2010, and as at August 2014 accounts for 20% of the total market capitalization of the Exchange. [6]
The Cement Company of Northern Nigeria was incorporated in 1962 as the first cement manufacturing firm in the Northern Nigeria region. The first plant was built by a West German engineering firm at the cost of three million pounds. [7] The capacity of the first plant was 200,000 tonnes per annum producing through a dry process kiln.
Bauchi-Gwana Cement, Alkaeri L.G.A. Bauchi (subsidiary of Cretent Intl) BUA Cement, Obu, Okpella, Edo State Former Edo cement, near Benin City. BUA Cement, Kalambaina Sokoto State. Commissioned July 2018; Cement Company of Northern Nigeria, also known as Sokoto Cement, with 6 offices in northern states [38] Dangote Cement [39]
Table 4 - Hydraulic Cement – production – Europe and Central Eurasia (thousand metric tons) [4] Country: 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 Albania 2,000 1,800 1,300 1,110 918 889 600 575 530 578 348 — 180 106 84 200 200 Armenia 438 422 488 467 770 722 625 605 501 384 355 275 219 287 314 ...
The company was founded in 1981 as a trading enterprise, importing sugar, cement, rice, fisheries, and other consumer goods for distribution in the Nigeria market. [3] The group moved into manufacturing in the 1990s, starting with textiles, moving onto flour milling, salt processing and sugar refining by the end of the decade.
In March 2011, the institute announced that it had developed a new technology for the moulding of bricks known as cement stabilized bricks technology. [11] The new technology was to reduce the cost of building due to a cheap alternative building material that the technology used in the production of bricks. [11]
In 2005, Nigeria posted a US$26 billion trade surplus, corresponding to almost 20% of gross domestic product. In 2005, Nigeria achieved a positive current account balance of US$9.6 billion. The Nigerian currency is the naira (NGN). As of June 2006, the exchange rate was about US$1=NGN128.4. As of June 2019, it stands at US$1 =NGN357.