(a) Explain any five factors that should be considered in the location of a cement factory (b) Describe any three problems facing cement factories in Tropic...
(a) Explain any five factors that should be considered in the location of a cement factory
(b) Describe any three problems facing cement factories in Tropical Africa
(a) Five factors to consider in the location of a cement factory
Availability of raw materials: the factory must be sited close to deposits of limestone (the main raw material) together with clay/shale and gypsum, because these are bulky and weight-losing.
Source of power/fuel: cement manufacture uses much energy for the kilns, so nearness to coal, gas or electricity supply is important.
Water supply: an adequate supply of water is needed for the manufacturing process and cooling.
Transport facilities: good roads and railways are needed to bring in fuel and take the heavy, finished cement to markets.
Nearness to market: siting near large urban and building markets reduces the cost of distributing the heavy product.
Availability of labour and land: a large flat site and a supply of skilled and unskilled workers are required; capital is also considered.
(b) Three problems facing cement factories in Tropical Africa
Inadequate and unreliable power supply: frequent electricity failures disrupt the energy-intensive kiln operations and raise costs.
Poor transport network: bad roads and limited railways make it costly to move fuel to the factory and cement to distant markets.
Shortage of capital, skilled manpower and spare parts: heavy dependence on imported machinery, foreign experts and imported fuel, together with obsolete plant and low local demand in some areas, limits production.
(a) Five factors to consider in the location of a cement factory
Availability of raw materials: the factory must be sited close to deposits of limestone (the main raw material) together with clay/shale and gypsum, because these are bulky and weight-losing.
Source of power/fuel: cement manufacture uses much energy for the kilns, so nearness to coal, gas or electricity supply is important.
Water supply: an adequate supply of water is needed for the manufacturing process and cooling.
Transport facilities: good roads and railways are needed to bring in fuel and take the heavy, finished cement to markets.
Nearness to market: siting near large urban and building markets reduces the cost of distributing the heavy product.
Availability of labour and land: a large flat site and a supply of skilled and unskilled workers are required; capital is also considered.
(b) Three problems facing cement factories in Tropical Africa
Inadequate and unreliable power supply: frequent electricity failures disrupt the energy-intensive kiln operations and raise costs.
Poor transport network: bad roads and limited railways make it costly to move fuel to the factory and cement to distant markets.
Shortage of capital, skilled manpower and spare parts: heavy dependence on imported machinery, foreign experts and imported fuel, together with obsolete plant and low local demand in some areas, limits production.