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Table 3 - Hydraulic Cement – production – Asia and The Pacific (thousand metric tons) [3] Country 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 Afghanistan 37 38 36 50 50 50 — — 120 120 120 120 120 116 116 116 116 Australia 8,600 8,600 9,000 9,200 9,400 9,500 9,000 8,000 8,000 8,000 7,550 7,500 7,500
The cement industry in the United States produced 82.8 million tonnes (81,500,000 long tons; 91,300,000 short tons) of cement in 2015, worth US$9.8 billion, and was used to manufacture concrete worth about US$50 billion. The US was the world's third-largest producer of cement, after China and India.
While Colombia is where Argos produces the most cement, the United States is where Argos has its largest concrete production capacity (8.9 million cubic meters per year). There are 134 concrete production plants and 1,350 mixers. Argos' concrete production capacity in Colombia is only 1.7 million cubic meters per year, with 40 plants and 230 ...
In 2010, the world production of hydraulic cement was 3,300 megatonnes (3,600 × 10 ^ 6 short tons). The top three producers were China with 1,800, India with 220, and the United States with 63.5 million tonnes for a total of over half the world total by the world's three most populated states. [56]
Rosendale cement is a natural hydraulic cement that was produced in and around Rosendale, New York, beginning in 1825. [1] From 1818 to 1970 natural cements were produced in over 70 locations in the United States and Canada.
Pages in category "Cement industry" ... Cement industry in the United States; ... List of countries by cement production; M.
List of countries by cement production; List of countries by cereal production; List of countries by cherry production; List of countries by coconut production; List of countries by coffee production; List of countries by copper smelter production; List of countries by corn production; List of countries by food self-sufficiency rate; List of ...
Portland cement had been imported into the United States from England and Germany, and in the 1870s and 1880s, it was being produced by Eagle Portland cement near Kalamazoo, Michigan. In 1875, the first portland cement was produced in the Coplay Cement Company Kilns under the direction of David O. Saylor in Coplay, Pennsylvania. [11]