Gypsum industry news
Minotaur agrees gypsum deal 21 October 2014
Australia: Minotaur has signed a conditional sale agreement on its gypsum deposit at Lake Purdilla on Eyre Peninsula in South Australia. Minotaur will receive US$4.8m in cash for the project, which is 5-15km south of Streaky Bay. The project has a target of 50-60Mt of gypsum. The sale is subject to the unnamed buyer conducting and being satisfied with a study into a port or trans-shipment of the gypsum, plus government transfer approvals.
Minotaur managing director Andrew Woskett said that the sale was part of the company's strategy to divest from industrial minerals and concentrate on copper, nickel and gold. "We've been trying to lighten our exposure to industrial minerals," said Woskett. "That's been proceeding for some time." The sale, which is scheduled to be completed by May 2015, would deliver more than the book value of the project. Earlier studies found that engineering work on a port was viable, but there were now more options, including barging and containerisation.
Bergauf Building Materials buys plant in Sterlitamak 21 October 2014
Russia: The Ural-based company Bergauf Building Materials has purchased a production facility in Sterlitamak in the Bashkortostan Republic, Volga, from HeidelbergCement. The deal included a plant producing dry mortars under the brand Bystroy and a gypsum production complex. The price of the assets has not been reported.