Building responsibly across our supply chains.
From the materials we trade to the cement projects we invest in, we apply environmental, social, and governance considerations as a structural element of diligence — not a marketing layer.
We are not a green company. We trade and invest in industrial materials — including cement, which is carbon-intensive by nature. We do not pretend otherwise.
What we can do is bring discipline to how those operations are run: efficiency improvements, alternative fuels where viable, modern emission controls, and substantive community engagement. These are not options for us. They are baseline expectations of any project we are involved in.
How ESG shows up in practice.
Environmental
Energy efficiency, use of alternative fuels (biomass, refuse-derived fuel, agricultural waste) where the local infrastructure permits, modern emission controls (NOx, SOx, particulates), and water stewardship in water-stressed regions.
Social
Local employment, supplier development, community engagement on infrastructure (roads, power, water) where projects sit, and substantive — not symbolic — safety practices throughout operations.
Governance
Big Four audit standards, anti-corruption protocols, transparent financial reporting, formal board oversight, and clear separation between operating company and shareholder activity. Governance is the structural foundation that makes the other two areas credible.
Cement is responsible for roughly 7-8% of global CO₂ emissions. We will not pretend otherwise.
Modern plants with proper governance, alternative-fuel capability, and emission controls operate at materially lower emissions intensity than older facilities. We believe disciplined industrial investment in emerging-market cement — focused on modern plants, efficiency, and ESG standards — produces better climate outcomes than leaving older, dirtier plants to dominate.
This is not a marketing claim. It is the operational thesis behind our investment activity in the sector.
Want to understand our ESG posture in detail?
We'd be glad to discuss specifics with serious counterparties.
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