Chuka Uroko
T
|
he raging controversy among cement
manufacturers and the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) over the
application of various cement grades for building and construction may have
waned as block makers in the northern part of Nigeria have started complying
with the directive by SON on the classification of cement grades and their
uses.
Worried by the menace of building collapse in
the country, SON had issued a directive that 52.5R cement grade be used for
bridges, 42.5R be used for casting of columns, beams, slabs and making blocks,
while the low-grade 32.5MPA was restricted to plastering.
At a sensitisation seminar organised by
Dangote Cement in Kaduna recently, block-makers in the north said they had
complied with the SON directive as most of them now used 42.5R for making
blocks.
Hamza Gambo, chairman, Kaduna State Blocks
and Concrete Makers Association, said all his members had complied with the SON
directive, adding that the directive was in the national interest and that most
block-makers in the north now used Dangote 3X cement, which is the only cement
with 42.5R grade that meets the SON specification.
Gambo, who owns block-making factories across
the country, warned those who have not complied to do so as his association was
desirous of supporting government in its effort to stamp out what he described
as “senseless killing of innocent people” as a result of building collapse in
the country.
“We’ve been using the new improved cement for
the past two months. Our members who will refuse to comply, we would deal with
them according to our constitution,” he promised, commending Dangote Group for
organising the seminar across the country as that would add value to the
block-making business as well as guarantee safety of Nigerians.
Shola Alo, regional sales director, Dangote
Cement, said the seminar was aimed at sensitising the block-makers on the new
directive of SON, educating them on issues bordering on manufacturing,
marketing, sales, cement usage, as well as lending a helping hand and getting a
feedback.
Olaniyi Johnson, regional sales director who
handled the technical aspect of the training, said the seminars across the
north were paying off as they enabled the end-users to make right choices and
at the same time avoid unethical practices in the application of cement.
In Kano, Ya’u Suleiman, chairman of the Block
Makers Association, said the training would, without doubt, help his members in
making the right decision, adding that his members now used 42.5R cement
produced by Dangote Cement.
Yau Ahmad, chairman, Progress Block Industry
in Suleja, Niger State, also said his company used the 42.5R cement produced by
Dangote Cement Plc, adding that it was in the interest of all Nigerians to do
so. The cement company also supported the block-makers with wheelbarrows,
shovels, boots and hand gloves.
Source: BusinessDay
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