THE Government, via the Ministry of Trade and Industry, has responded to news that Trinidad Cement Ltd (TCL) intends to raise the prices of its cement products effective December 20.
A letter from TCL, dated Monday December 13, announced the price of premium cement will increase by 15 per cent and eco-cement by eight per cent.
In a letter to industry partners and stakeholders on December 13, TCL manager Reshma Gooljar-Singh said the company can no longer maintain its prices, as input costs continue to rise. Gooljar-Singh said the main costs include natural gas, imported spares and raw materials needed to manufacture quality cement.
However, the ministry in a press release at 12.43 pm on Monday, said that two public policy adjustments were done to allow for additional volumes of extra-regional cement to enter TT, at a lower rate of duty, to ensure cement remains competitively priced.
The ministry said that when it became aware of impending cement price increases in November, on the 18th of that month, Cabinet agreed to a revision of the Quota and Import Licensing Regime for cement for 2022.
As such, the maximum quota ceiling for cement allowed for importation will be set at 150,000 tonnes (an increase from 75,000 tonnes in 2021 wit each existing registered importer receiving a 50 per cent increase in their quota allocation in 2022.
The ministry's release added that during a special meeting of the Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED) of Caricom on December 10, and at the request of TT, COTED agreed to a suspension of the CET (common external tariff) and increase of the rate of duty to 20 per cent on other hydraulic cements of HS 2523.90.00 for the one year period, January 1 to December 31, 2022.
COTED had previously approved a suspension of the CET and increase of the rate of duty to 50 per cent on other hydraulic cements of HS 2523.90.00 for the one year (January 1 to December 31, 2021) therefore, for the period January 01, 2022 to December 31, 2022, the rate of duty on other hydraulic cements will now be 20 per cent from the previous 50 per cent.
These measures, the ministry said, will also ensure the continued viability of the local cement manufacturing industry (which is a net foreign exchange earner and currently provides employment to over 315 persons directly and engages approximately 450 small contractors for services).
"The Government is of the firm view that the availability of affordable cement forms a critical linkage between the manufacturing and construction sectors and therefore is vital for the country’s sustainable development as well as the welfare of consumers," the ministry said in its release.
The ministry also said it will continue to actively monitor market conditions in the domestic market and make further adjustments as required to ensure affordable cement for consumers.
In her letter to stakeholders, the TCL manager said the marginal price increase took into account the interest of protecting the vulnerable construction sector, and the company has been h