France: Saint-Gobain’s sales grew by 15.8% year-on-year to Euro44.2bn in 2021 from Euro38.1bn in 2020. Its earnings before taxation, interest, depreciation and amortisation (EBTIDA) rose by 41% to Euro6.20bn from Euro4.42bn. Sales and earnings increased by 4% and 27% compared to 2019 levels before the coronavirus pandemic started. Sales revenue and operation income was reported up in all geographical regions. In North America the group noted that the integration of Continental Building Products had boosted its position in the US gypsum wallboard market and helped it to tap new sales channels.

“The records achieved in 2021 confirm that the group has entered a new post-transformation trajectory in terms of performance: market-beating sales growth, record earnings and margins, a high level of free cash flow generation that has more than doubled compared to previous years, and strong value creation for our shareholders thanks to strict capital allocation and the determined execution of our portfolio optimisation,” said Benoit Bazin, the chief executive officer of Saint-Gobain.

The group completed or signed 37 acquisitions in 2021, including Chryso and GCP Applied Technologies (GCP), marking its rapid expansion into the construction chemicals market. In November 2021 On November 15, 2021, Saint-Gobain said that it had acquired a gypsum plant in Nairobi, Kenya. It will be the company’s first production site in Kenya, where it will also invest in a construction chemicals production line.

Denmark: Tentoma has launched its new XL Power gypsum wallboard packing machine. The supplier says that machine can pack up to 19m-long boards. For shorter lengths, it can stretch film for more boards per packaging cycle, increasing the packaging speed for the products by up to 25%. Tentoma built and sold its first XL Power packiaging machine to replace an orbital wrapper.

Canada: Irving Wallboard is preparing to rejoin the local gas distribution network near to its plant at Saint John in New Brunswick. The company has been offered a special low rate as an incentive to return, according to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. In an interview Gilles Volpé, the vice-president of Liberty Utilities, the operator of New Brunswick's gas distribution network, said that these kinds of arrangements sometimes occurred with industrial end users. The proposed deal would see it use at least 600,000GJ/yr of gas making the wallboard producer Liberty Utilities’s largest customer.

The company, which also operates under the name Atlantic Wallboard, was previously the largest individual customer on New Brunswick's public gas distribution system but it left in 2015 in a pricing dispute. It then switched to using compressed gas delivered by truck.

An application has been made to the New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board and a full hearing into the proposal is scheduled for April 2022.

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