Insulation industry news from Global Insulation
Saint-Gobain may acquire CSR for US$5.44bn
23 February 2024Australia: France-based Saint-Gobain has submitted a non-binding indicative offer of US$5.44bn for building materials producer and land banking entity CSR. CSR’s businesses include insulation producer Bradford, fibre cement systems producer Cemintel, wallboard producer Gyprock, autoclaved aerated concrete (AAC) block producer Hebel and roofing producer Monier. Together, CSR’s building materials units accounted for 72% of its sales in 2023.
Owens Corning is a Top 10 Corporate Citizen
19 October 2023US: Owens Corning was named among the Top 10 companies on the Best Corporate Citizen list 2023. The list ranks all companies on the Russell 1000 Index by transparency and performance across 184 environmental, social and governance factors. The result represents Owens Corning’s sixth consecutive year as a Top 10 company.
Senior vice president and chief sustainability officer David Rabuano said “This achievement is particularly meaningful as it reinforces the importance of our work and how we do it. This directly speaks to the commitment of our 19,000 employees in support of our mission to build a sustainable future through material innovation.”
Etex donates modular housing for flooding victims
21 December 2021Belgium: Etex has donated five sustainable modular housing units to families dispossessed by flooding in the summer of 2021. The company built the houses at Rochefort and Pepinster in two weeks and their assembly took 48 hours. Etex said that it plans to develop the construction method in future in order to meet needs and new trends in the housing sector.
Bernard Delvaux, chief executive officer of Etex said “It was important for us to donate our expertise through these five houses built in a circular way with a very low carbon footprint. Our modular construction technologies meet multiple housing needs around the world with the fast construction of affordable, well-insulated, high-quality and attractive living spaces.”
Boral threatens to close brick plants
07 November 2014Australia: Boral CEO Mike Kane has said that Australia's brick industry will pay the price if the competition regulator sticks to its ‘narrow view’ of the brick market. He warned that plant closures and land sales were likely if the merger of Boral and CSR's brick businesses was blocked.
Boral announced plans to merge its east coast brick business with rival CSR in April 2014 in a bid to boost profitability. In its statement of issues in October 2014, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) rejected Boral and CSR's definition of bricks as part of a broader cladding market and gave the preliminary conclusion that the deal would increase the price of bricks and reduce consumer choice.
Kane said that the ACCC's issues paper was ‘concerning.’ "We are in the fortunate position where the high price of land in Australian eastern metropolitan markets means that value will eventually be delivered for Boral shareholders if an ultimate exit over time is the only remaining option," said Kane. About 550 people work in Boral's brick business. Boral has cut more than 1000 jobs in the last two years. "Sadly for Australia, a narrow view by regulators will see the brick industry on the same trajectory as the auto, oil, refining, steel, aluminium and cement industries," said Kane.
ACCC chairman Rod Sims stressed that the issues paper was a preliminary view and the regulator was seeking more information. "Every time we assess a merger, the merger parties argue that our view is too narrow. Our preliminary view is that most residential houses use bricks, as distinct from other cladding,” he said. The ACCC plans to make its final decision on 18 December 2014.