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Heidelberg Materials

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(Redirected fromHeidelberg Cement)
German building materials manufacturer
Heidelberg Materials
Company typeAktiengesellschaft
FWBHEI
DAX component
IndustryBuilding materials
Predecessorcement industry near Hannover Edit this on Wikidata
Founded1874
FounderJohann Philipp Schifferdecker
HeadquartersHeidelberg,Germany
Key people
Dr. Dominik von Achten(CEO and chairman of the managing board)[1]
Dr. Bernd Scheifele(Chairman of thesupervisory board)
ProductsCement,aggregates,concrete,asphalt
RevenueIncrease€21,178 million(2023)[2]
Increase€3,022 million (2023)[2]
Increase€2,190.4 million(2023)[2]
Total assets$41.9bn(2018)[3]
Total equity€18,375mn(2023)[2]
Number of employees
Decrease 51,000(2023)[2]
Websitehttps://www.heidelbergmaterials.com/en
White company building at a crossroads, lined with trees on the left
Heidelberg Materials in Heidelberg

Heidelberg Materials is a Germanmultinationalbuilding materials company headquartered inHeidelberg,Germany. Formerly known as HeidelbergCement AG, the company has rebranded as Heidelberg Materials in September 2022.[4] It is aDAX corporation and stands as one of the world's largest building materials companies. On 1 July 2016, HeidelbergCement AG completed the acquisition of a 45% shareholding inItalcementi. This acquisition made HeidelbergCement the number one producer ofconstruction aggregates, the second-largest in cement and the third-largest in ready-mixed concrete worldwide. In the 2020Forbes Global 2000, HeidelbergCement was ranked as the 678th -largest public company in the world.[5]

The enlarged group has activities in over 50 countries with 51,000 employees working at almost 3,000 production sites. Heidelberg Materials operates around 130 cement plants with an annual cement capacity of around 170 million tonnes, around 1,300 ready-mixed concrete production sites, and just under 600 aggregates quarries.[2]

History

[edit]
HeidelbergCement incl. Italcementi

The company was founded on 5 June 1874 by Johann Philipp Schifferdecker, atHeidelberg,Baden-Württemberg,Germany. It was making 80,000 tonnes per annum ofPortland cement in 1896. It acquired numerous other small companies from 1914 onwards, and by 1936, it was making one million tonnes per annum.

Following theNazi seizure of power in 1933, the cement industry profited massively from state-run construction and armaments projects, leading to a generally positive view of the policies of the Reich government among workers and management of the company.[6] The company's general director Otto Heuer had joined theNSDAP on 1 May 1933, and was a member of theFreundeskreis Reichsführer SS.[7] During theSecond World War, the cement industry was classified as essential to the war effort and initially experienced only minor restrictions in production. As the war progressed,prisoners of war and forcedlabourers were used in numerous plants; according to the company, the number of people affected is estimated at 1,000.[8]

Activities abroad began with the acquisition of part of Vicat Cement,France. Shipments reached 8.3 million tonnes in 1972. In 1977, a massive program of purchases inNorth America began with the acquisition of Lehigh Cement. In 1990, expansion in easternEurope began.

In 1993, it acquired part ofSA Cimenteries CBR ofBelgium, which already had a major multinational operation. Since then, it has continued to expand, with complete buy out of CBR, and purchases in eastern Europe and Asia. A major step was the acquisition of Scancem in 1999, with operations inNorthern Europe as well asAfrica. Indocement inIndonesia was included in 2001.

In May 2007, the British companyHanson was acquired, a transaction worth £7.85 billion (US$15.8 billion), which gave the company a stronger market position in theUnited Kingdom and theUnited States, and turned HeidelbergCement into the world's leading producer of aggregates.

HeidelbergCement plant inSchelklingen, Germany

HeidelbergCement has (2010) 29 cement and grinding plants inWestern and Northern Europe, 19 inEastern Europe andCentral Asia, 16 cement plants in North America, and 14 in Africa and theMediterranean Basin. The company sold Maxit Group and its 35% share inVicat Cement to help finance its acquisition ofHanson plc in August 2007. In most of the group's European countries, HeidelbergCement is the market leader in the cement business.

Adolf Merckle was a big investor in HeidelbergCement.[9] A capital increase in HeidelbergCement in September 2009, combined with a selling of shares from the Merckle family, opened up for other international owners and higher trading volumes on the stock exchanges.[citation needed] In August 2006, HeidelbergCement AG entered the Indiancement market with the acquisition of Mysore Cement.[10]

In 2013, the cement company CJSC Construction Materials based in theRussianRepublic of Bashkortostan was acquired.[11]

Kunda Nordic Tsement in Estonia is one of the subsidiaries of HeidelbergCement.

On 1 July 2016, HeidelbergCement AG completed the acquisition of a 45% shareholding inItalcementi S.p.A.[12][13] With the acquisition, HeidelbergCement became the number one producer of aggregates, the number two in cement and number three in ready mixed concrete worldwide. The company agreed to sell its assets in the United States for $660 million toCementos Argos to fulfil anti-trust requirements for the takeover.[14]

The Heidelberg headquarters onBerliner Strasse, built in 1963, were demolished in 2017 and a larger new building was built on the same site by 2020 for around 100 million euros.[15]

Heidelberg has entered new important markets, includingFrance andItaly in Europe,Egypt andMorocco inNorth Africa andThailand inSoutheast Asia. InCanada,India andKazakhstan, the takeover further strengthens the existing market presence of HeidelbergCement.[16] The enlarged group is active in around sixty countries, with 60,000 employees working at 3,000 production sites. Heidelberg Materials operates around 130 cement plants with an annual cement capacity of around 170 million tonnes, around 1,300 ready-mixed concrete production sites, and just under 600 aggregates quarries.[16]

On December 21, 2023, theKakanj cement factory announced the decision to change its name to Heidelberg Materials Cement BiH dd Kakanj.[17]

The company worldwide

[edit]

Heidelberg Materials Global Corporate Headquarters are located inHeidelberg, Germany.

The company operates in over 50 countries/territories around the world including:

Structures operating in Russia

[edit]
  1. Cement factory,[18]Sterlitamak
  2. Cement factory "CESLA",[19]Slantsy, Leningrad Oblast
  3. Cement factory,[20]Novogurovsky

Controversial activities and criticism

[edit]

Climate change

[edit]

As cement manufacturing is an extremelyCO₂ intensive process, the cement industry is one of the main contributors to climate change, being responsible for a significant amount of global emissions.[21] Ofall companies traded on the DAX, Heidelberg Materials was the second largest CO₂-emitter.[22] For this reason, there have already been numerous protests by environmental groups, likeFridays For Future,[23]Extinction Rebellion[24] andGreenpeace.[25] In August 2020, the local group "Wurzeln im Beton" ("Roots in Concrete") blocked the main entrance to the company's headquarters[26] and in May 2021, its cement plant near Heidelberg was blocked by the localExtinction Rebellion chapter.[27]

By 2024, despite reduction of the DAX total, and Heidelberg's emissions in particular, Heidelberg was the largest emitter in the DAX,[28] cement manufacture emissions being particularly difficult to reduce. Nevertheless Heidelberg still plans to be net zero by 2030, and expects its first under-construction carbon capture, usage and storage facility to come online in 2025.[29]

CO₂ emissions of Heidelberg Materials[30][31]
YearEmissions (in million tons)
199083.2
201773.8
201875.7
201972.6
202067.9
202169.0

Indonesia

[edit]

Heidelberg Materials has been heavily involved in the planned construction of a controversial cement plant on theIndonesian island ofJava through its subsidiary "Indocement". The objective is the exploitation of the Kendeng mountains against the resistance of the people living there.

In addition to the destruction of the complex ecological system, the construction also has created the marginalization of partiallyindigenous living inhabitants of the region to follow.[32] In this region, the indigenous known as Sedulur Kendeng are protesting against the planned mining operation of PT Semen Indonesia, a state owned enterprise. In March 2017, 50 protestors poured concrete over their feet in front of the Presidential Palace inJakarta. This is the second time this has occurred in eleven months.[33]

In addition to the protest against the factory building and its ecological consequences as "misconceived 'development' at the expense of indigenous and peasants", the activists also appealed politically at Heidelberg Materials that a multinational "company should not invest in environmental destruction and human rights violations, in any country in the world."[34]

In September 2020, representatives of the local communities submitted a complaint to the German government.[35] It alleges Heidelberg Materials' plans in the Kendeng mountains to threaten their livelihoods, water resources and the local ecosystem as well as sites sacred to local Indigenous Samin communities. As a member of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Germany maintains a National Contact Point that addresses complaints against German companies for overseas violations of the OECD Guidelines on Multinational Enterprises.[36] The guidelines contain standards on human rights and the environment.[37]

West Bank

[edit]

In Israeli occupiedWest Bank Heidelberg Materials' wholly owned subsidiaryHanson Israel manufactures ready-made cement, aggregates and asphalt for Israel's construction industry. In March 2009, the Israeli human rights organizationYesh Din filed a petition with the Israeli high court demanding a halt to mining activity in West Bank quarries, including Hanson Israel'sNahal Raba quarry.[38][39]

According to research of the ARD magazine "Panorama" on 2 September 2010, and the ARD Studios Tel Aviv, the minerals produced are brought to Israel without any benefit to the Palestinian communities.[40] Palestinians from the village ofaz-Zawiya in the immediate vicinity of the quarry lay claim to the land. The Israeli Supreme Court rejected the petition from Yesh Din in December 2011.

Divestment

[edit]

In September the largestDanish pension fund,PFA Pension(Da), divested from Heidelberg Materials due to "Violation of basic human rights, which conflicts withUN Global Compact principles 1 and 2."[41]

In October 2017, Danish pension firmSampension added Heidelberg Cement to its blacklist, because it operates an asphalt factory and quarry in the West Bank.[42]

US

[edit]

In California, after 80 years of operations and more than 2,000 violations over a 10-year period the part Heidelberg-owned[citation needed] Leigh Cement factory and quarry announced in 2023 that it would shutdown.[43] According to ABC7, the environmental advocacy non-profit Green Foothills claimed that the cement plant was the worst source of air pollution in the county of Santa Clara.[43]

Russian invasion of Ukraine

[edit]

HeidelbergCement has faced criticism for its continued presence in Russia despite the geopolitical tensions and sanctions following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. While the company announced a freeze on investments in its Russian operations, concerns remain about its ongoing activities in the region. According to theLeave Russia project, HeidelbergCement has yet to fully withdraw, raising questions about its ethical practices and commitment to international standards.[44][45]

Wales

[edit]

In March 2024, residents of Glyncoch, near Pontypridd in South Wales, engaged in a series of protests around the over-riding of the local authority's opposition to extend quarrying, by the Minister of Climate Change,Julie James. This successful appeal will allow a further 15.7 million tonnes of rock to be extracted for road surfacing and runways. The quarry operations will continue until 2047 and will come within 164 meters of schools and housing as well as destroying a community green space and a wildlife sanctuary.[46]

See also

[edit]

List of companies traded on the DAXMain Heidelberg Materials competitors are:

References

[edit]
  1. ^Beumelburg, Christoph."Dr. Dominik von Achten becomes the new Chairman of the Managing Board of HeidelbergCement".HeidelbergCement. Retrieved22 February 2020.
  2. ^abcdef"Annual and Sustainability Report 2023"(PDF). 9 September 2024. Retrieved9 September 2024.
  3. ^"HeidelbergCement | Company Overview & News".Forbes.
  4. ^"HeidelbergCement becomes Heidelberg Materials".Heidelberg Materials Group. 20 September 2022. Retrieved21 August 2023.
  5. ^"Forbes Global 2000".Forbes. Retrieved31 October 2020.
  6. ^Cramer, Dietmar (2013)."Die Geschichte von HeidelbergCement. Der Weg des süddeutschen Unternehmens zum internationalen Konzern"(PDF) (in German). p. 94. Retrieved6 April 2020.
  7. ^"Statistisch-wissenschaftliches Institut des Reichsführers SS: Angehörige des Freundeskreises des Reichsführers-SS" (in German). Archived fromthe original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved6 April 2020.
  8. ^Cramer, Dietmar (2013)."Die Geschichte von HeidelbergCement. Der Weg des süddeutschen Unternehmens zum internationalen Konzern"(PDF) (in German). p. 101. Retrieved6 April 2020.
  9. ^Adolf MerckleArchived 2011-02-24 at theWayback Machine on Forbes.com
  10. ^"HeidelbergCement India CEO Ashish Guha quits".Times of India. 2 May 2014. Archived fromthe original on 4 February 2015.
  11. ^"Beteiligung bei CJSC erhöht - Zement Kalk Gips".www.zkg.de (in German). Retrieved19 January 2023.
  12. ^"HeidelbergCement schließt Erwerb von 45%-Anteil an Italcementi ab".Heidelberg Materials.
  13. ^"Ad hoc: HeidelbergCement AG erwirbt 45 % der Aktien an der Italcementi S.p.A."Heidelberg Materials.
  14. ^"HeidelbergCement sells U.S. assets for $660 million".Reuters. 18 August 2016. Retrieved18 August 2016.
  15. ^"Heidelberg: Umzug bei HeidelbergCement beginnt Ende Mai".Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung (in German). Retrieved19 January 2023.
  16. ^ab"Annual and Sustainability Report 2023"(PDF).Heidelberg Materials. 9 September 2024. Retrieved9 September 2024.
  17. ^kakanj cement."Tvornica cementa Kakanj od danas je Heidelberg Materials: Materijali kojima gradimo budućnost".klix.ba (in Bosnian). Retrieved21 December 2023.
  18. ^"Цементный завод в Стерлитамаке".www.heidelbergcement.ru.
  19. ^"Цементный завод "ЦЕСЛА"".www.heidelbergcement.ru.
  20. ^"Цементный завод в Новогуровском".www.heidelbergcement.ru.
  21. ^Andrew, Robbie M. (26 January 2018)."Global CO2 emissions from cement production"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 21 July 2018.We show that global process emissions in 2016 were 1.45 ± 0.20 GtCO₂, equivalent to about 4 % of emissions from fossil fuels
  22. ^"Klimabilanz: Rückschlag fürs Klima: CO2-Bilanz der Dax-Konzerne verschlechtert sich – vor allem bei einem".www.handelsblatt.com (in German). Retrieved11 August 2022.
  23. ^""Make Love - not Cement": "Fridays for Future" nehmen HeidelbergCement ins Visier".Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung (in German). Retrieved11 August 2022.
  24. ^"Kritik an Zementfirma - Heidelberg - Nachrichten und Informationen".www.mannheimer-morgen.de (in German). 3 June 2020. Retrieved11 August 2022.
  25. ^"Warum die Klima-Aktivisten gegen HeidelbergCement protestieren - Firmen in der Region".www.mannheimer-morgen.de (in German). 6 May 2021. Retrieved11 August 2022.
  26. ^"Heidelberg: Klimaaktivisten protestieren an Zentrale von Heidelberg Cement (Update, plus Fotogalerie)".Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung (in German). Retrieved11 August 2022.
  27. ^Zeitung, Süddeutsche (5 May 2021)."Umweltaktivisten blockieren Zufahrt von HeidelbergCement".Süddeutsche.de (in German). Retrieved11 August 2022.
  28. ^https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/index/DAX-7395/news/Analysis-DAX-companies-reduce-greenhouse-gas-emissions-47667787/
  29. ^2023 report
  30. ^"Sustainability Report".HeidelbergCement Group. Retrieved11 August 2022.
  31. ^"Nachhaltigkeitsbericht".HeidelbergCement Group (in German). Retrieved11 August 2022.
  32. ^Tempo.Co- (16 May 2016)."Warga Kendeng Tolak Pabrik Semen di Depan Kantor Kedutaan Jerman | lingkungan | tempo.co" (in German). Retrieved28 June 2016.
  33. ^"Kendeng Against Cement".MR online. 27 March 2017. Retrieved2 May 2017.
  34. ^"News - Berlin: Solidarität mit Kendeng gegen HeidelbergCement - Rettet den Regenwald e.V."www.regenwald.org (in German). Archived fromthe original on 26 August 2016. Retrieved28 June 2016.
  35. ^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 19 September 2020. Retrieved14 September 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  36. ^"Nationale Kontaktstelle für die OECD-Leitsätze (NKS)".
  37. ^Klawitter, Nils (9 September 2020)."OECD-Beschwerde: Indonesische Landarbeiter klagen gegen deutschen Zementgiganten".Der Spiegel.
  38. ^Request by Yesh Din to the Supreme Court in Israel.Archived 2016-03-07 at theWayback Machine (English)
  39. ^HeidelbergCementArchived 2018-08-28 at theWayback Machine, whoprofits.org
  40. ^Deutsches Investment: Raubbau im PalästinensergebietArchived 2016-03-13 at theWayback Machine, ARD-Magazin Panorama, 2. September 2010 (German)
  41. ^Responsible investmentArchived 2017-09-21 at theWayback Machine, PFA pensions
  42. ^Max Schindler (13 October 2017)."Danish pension fund bans four firms over West Bank settlement activity". Jerusalem Post.Archived 2017-10-13 at theWayback Machine
  43. ^ab"Lehigh Cement Plant in South Bay closes permanently after decade's worth of violations".ABC7 San Francisco. 18 August 2023. Retrieved28 March 2024.
  44. ^"HeidelbergCement freezes investments in Russian operations". Global Cement. Retrieved23 January 2025.
  45. ^"HeidelbergCement". Leave Russia. Retrieved23 January 2025.
  46. ^"Pontypridd: Glyncoch protest over Craig-yr-Hesg quarry expansion".www.bbc.com. Retrieved26 March 2024.

External links

[edit]
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