Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Iraq cement company gets $130m to double production

Demand for cement in Iraq is growing for the development of civil infrastructure Pexels/Yury Kim
Demand for cement in Iraq is growing for the development of civil infrastructure
  • IFC invests in Al-Douh
  • Creating 2,700 jobs
  • Iraq wants 52m tons a year

A major Iraqi cement manufacturer has secured financing of up to $130 million to support plans to more than double annual production.

The International Finance Corporation (IFC), part of the World Bank, is investing in Al-Douh Iraqi Company for Cement Industries to create thousands of jobs and to bolster reconstruction efforts. 

IFC is providing a financing package in long-term debt to Al-Douh, which will enable the company to expand its cement production capacity to three million tons by the end of 2025.

The expansion is expected to create more than 2,700 jobs. 

Iraq’s minister of industry and minerals, Dr Khaled Battal Al-Najm, has called for a significant increase in cement production to 52 million tons per year to meet the rising demand of the country’s construction industry.

Over the past year, companies from Saudi Arabia, China, Pakistan and Turkey have all announced plans to increase the capacity of Iraq’s cement industry.

According to Global Ideal Intelligence Research and Consulting, Iraq has 22 factories with a total production capacity of almost 30 million tons per year.  

IFC said its funding will promote the use of energy-efficient technologies, while it is also providing advisory services to Al-Douh to facilitate a decarbonisation programme.  

Ashruf Megahed, IFC’s regional industry head (front row, right), says “IFC’s aim is to empower a key player in Iraq’s private sector to take a leading role in the economy’s diversification"IFC
Ashruf Megahed, IFC’s regional industry head (front row, right, with Sheikh Hatam Al-Khawam, chairman of Al-Douh, and Al-Douh board members Sheikh Ali Al-Khawamn and
Sheikh Mohammad Al-Farhood), says: “IFC’s aim is to empower a key player in Iraq’s private sector to take a leading role in the economy’s diversification’

“Growth and decarbonisation can go hand in hand, as this investment highlights,” said Ashruf Megahed, IFC’s regional industry head. 

According to the IMF, non-oil GDP is expected to grow by 5 percent in 2023.

“Structural reforms to spur private sector-led economic diversification and job creation remains pivotal for sustainable and inclusive growth,” added Jean-Guillaume Poulain, IMF mission chief for Iraq.

Iraq’s reconstruction needs are estimated at almost $90 billion, while the country’s economy remains substantially dependent on oil revenues, making it vulnerable to oil price fluctuations. 

Underscoring the need to decarbonise the industrial sector, Iraq will also need a $230 billion investment by 2040 to embark on a green growth path, according to the World Bank’s Country Climate and Development Report

IFC has channelled more than $1.2 billion into Iraq since 2005 to fuel the growth of its private sector. Its portfolio stands at around $188 million, in sectors such as energy, telecoms and banking. 

It also signed an agreement in September to help develop the country’s first airport public-private partnership project to modernise Baghdad International Airport.  

In November, Saudi-based Northern Region Cement announced plans for a new cement production line in Iraq after signing a deal with Germany’s KHD.

Northern Region Cement said it would invest nearly $139 million in the project, which would produce up to 1.3 million tons per year. 

Latest articles

Investors at the Dubai Financial Market. Drake & Scull was suspended from trading in 2018

Drake & Scull losses narrow before return to trading

Dubai contractor Drake & Scull International has trimmed its losses in the first quarter of this year as it nears the end of a drawn-out capital restructuring process. The Dubai-based utilities and infrastructure engineering company said in a press release accompanying disclosures to the Dubai Financial Market (DFM) that revenue jumped 55 percent year on […]

Gas Pump, Machine, Pump

Adnoc Distribution to expand as earnings rise

Adnoc Distribution plans to open 15 to 20 more fuelling stations in 2024 after opening eight in the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Egypt in the year so far. The expansion increased fuel and non-fuel sales, driving revenue up by over 9 percent year on year to AED8.7 billion ($2.4 billion) in the three months to […]

Patrick Pouyanné, CEO of TotalEnergies, said last month that he expects the first phase of the project to be completed in 2025

Iraq forges ahead with plans for first big solar plant

Iraq is proceeding with its first large-scale solar plant, which will be constructed by France’s TotalEnergies. The 1GW plant will be built in Basra, southern Iraq, as part of a $27 billion investment agreement for an integrated project that includes four oil, gas and renewables facilities. According to reports it will supply clean electricity equivalent […]

Architecture, Building, Factory Parkin said total revenue rose 8 percent to AED215.3 million, supported by an increase in public parking revenue parking cars motoring

Q1 profits rise 5% at Dubai’s Parkin

The Dubai government’s parking management company Parkin reported a 5 percent increase year on year in net earnings for the first quarter of 2024. This is despite the introduction of a 9 percent standard corporate tax from January this year. Net profit rose to AED103.7 million ($28.2 million) in January to the end of March, […]