Continuing economic uncertainties have pushed cement plants into a
corner.
Five major cement projects
critically short of capital sources for debt repayment all belong to state groups
and corporations. They are Dong Banh, Cam Pha, Thai Nguyen, Tam Diep and Halong
cement plants.
The Halong cement project,
developed by Song Da Group’s Ha Long Cement JSC, reported initial investment
capital of VND4 trillion ($190.4 million).
Total investment capital was then
scaled up by VND2.776 trillion ($132 million) due to extending construction, 45
months delayed. The cement plant came into operation from early 2010 and by the
end of March 2012 it incurred VND1.215 trillion losses ($57.8 million) on the
back of tremendous borrowing cost VND5.196 trillion ($247 million).
After 2012’s first quarter
developer Halong Cement JSC sought loans to pay back over VND2 trillion ($95
million). The company current faces paying due debts amounting to VND1.2 trillion
($57 million) during 2012-2015.
In the present context of
financial constraints the company would further source loans to pay back this
huge sum, according to a company source.
The Ministry of Finance (MoF)
when checking cement projects using loans with the government acting as
underwriter detected that during investment Halong Cement’s Management Board
had ratified the cement project’s investment cost of VND1.8 trillion ($86.7
million) channeling into conveyer belt facilities, infrastructure and associated
port earmarked to serve two cement production lines. However, in fact just one
line was installed.
The project’s investment ratio of
VND3.296 million ($157) per tonne was also higher than that at other cement
projects such as it was VND2.480 million ($118) per tonne at Cam Pha Cement and
VND2.561 million ($121) per tonne at Thang Long Cement.
The Halong cement case is not
unique as it was one out of 10 cement projects surfaced in the list of
government guaranteed cement projects bogging down in losses.
MoF checks showed that as of
March 31, 2012 accrued losses of these 10 cement projects approximated VND4.4
trillion ($209 million) and their outstanding loans amounted to VND22.495
trillion ($1.07 billion).
Of these cement projects loss
amount at Cam Pha Cement topped the list VND1.259 trillion ($60 million) while
that at Halong Cement was VND1.215 trillion ($57.8 million), at Yen Binh Cement
VND932 billion ($44 million), at new Haiphong Cement VND361 billion ($17.2
million), at Dong Banh Cement around VND197 billion ($9.3 million), at Song
Thao Cement VND173 billion ($8.2 million) and at Thang Long Cement VND127
billion ($6 million).
Of them, Dong Banh Cement had to
stop operation from 2012’s first quarter.
High borrowing costs, ineffective
investment and delayed construction pace were believed core reasons behind
cement projects’ poor performance. Borrowing costs at many cement projects
surpassed 80 per cent of total investment capital.
For instance, Hoang Mai Cement
loan exceeded total investment cost, Thai Nguyen Cement loan reached 93 and Tam
Diep Cement 98 per cent projects’ total investment.
Effectively running cement
projects also face high borrowing costs.
For instance, Tay Ninh Cement
reported VND2.09 trillion ($100 million) outstanding loan. Despite its good
sales figures the company faces repaying from VND300-370 billion ($14-17.6
million) principle and interest total amount per year during 2012-2015.
The Hai | vir.com.vn
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