Essayer OR - Gratuit
The Cement Shift
Kashmir Observer
|FEBRUARY 21, 2026 ISSUE
A PhD scholar from the valley explains how smarter, cleaner cement production could save Kashmir ₹20-40 crore every year while staying within environmental limits.
I spend my days building a digital twin of a cement plant, teaching algorithms to think like a kiln operator, and searching for ways to produce cement with less fuel and lower emissions.
It sounds technical and distant from everyday life in Kashmir, but the longer I work on it, the more I realise that this research speaks directly to the price of every house, school, and hospital built back home.
Cement rarely enters our economic debates in the valley. We speak about tourism, apples, handicrafts, education, and technology. We talk about employment and startups. Cement barely features in those conversations, even though it forms the base of every bridge over our rivers and each flood-protection wall that shields our towns.
Development in Kashmir rests on bags of cement stacked in hardware shops and trucked to construction sites in every district.
The numbers reveal how central it is. According to the Cement Manufacturers’ Association, the valley consumes around 2.5 to 3 million tonnes of cement each year. Housing construction accounts for a large portion of this demand, followed by public infrastructure and urban expansion.
New colonies rise at the edges of cities, roads widen, government projects multiply, and each one depends on steady cement supply.
Local production, however, meets only a part of this demand.
Five to six major plants operate in the valley, including Saifeo Cements in Khunmoh, Khyber Cement, Trumboo Cement Industries, Valley Cement Industries, and J and K Cements, along with smaller units concentrated in the Khrew Pulwama and Khunmoh belts.
Together, they produce roughly 0.8 to 1 million tonnes annually. More than half of our requirement, around 1.5 to 2 million tonnes, arrives from other states.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition FEBRUARY 21, 2026 ISSUE de Kashmir Observer.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Kashmir Observer
Kashmir Observer
24 Super-Specialty PG Seats Approved For J&K
Srinagar: In a major boost to specialised medical education in Jammu and Kashmir, the National Medical Commission has approved 24 new super-specialty postgraduate seats in Government Medical Colleges of Jammu and Srinagar and at the Sheri-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences in Soura.
1 min
FEBRUARY 22, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
6 Lakh Lavender Free Seedlings Distributed Among 750 Farmers In J&K, Uttarakhand
In a bid to further strengthen lavender cultivation, around six lakh free quality planting material (QPM) seedlings were distributed among 750 farmers in different parts of Jammu and Kashmir and Uttarakhand, an official said on Saturday.
1 mins
FEBRUARY 22, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Paras Health Successfully Removes One of the Rarest Bone Cancers
Paras Health Srinagar has successfully treated a patient diagnosed with an exceptionally rare malignant tumor — chondrosarcoma, a type of bone cancer affecting the upper part of the breastbone (manubrium sterni).
1 mins
FEBRUARY 22, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Rain Washes Out Super Eights Match Between New Zealand & Pakistan
New Zealand and Pakistan shared a point after incessant rain forced the abandonment of the opening T20 World Cup Group 2 Super Eights match here on Saturday.
1 min
FEBRUARY 22, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Stone-Pelting In J&K Down To Zero: Shah Says CRPF Played Key Role In Restoring Peace
Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Saturday said incidents of stone-pelting in Jammu and Kashmir have dropped to zero, attributing the shift to the sustained efforts of the Central Reserve Police Force.
1 min
FEBRUARY 22, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
FC Goa beat Mohammedan Sporting 2-0
FC Goa registered a comfortable 2-0 victory over Mohammedan Sporting Club to secure their first win of Indian Super League 2025-26 season at the Kishore Bharti Krirangan here on Friday.
1 mins
FEBRUARY 22, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Made In India Chip Very Important For Developed Nation: PM
The foundation of developed India will be laid on the basis of self-reliance for which having chips made in India is very important, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Saturday.
2 mins
FEBRUARY 22, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
BJP Strengthens Grassroots Network as Political Leaders Switch Sides
Several prominent leaders and workers from the Jammu & Kashmir National Conference (NC), Indian National Congress (INC), Jammu and Kashmir Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Apni Party, DPAP and other political outfits formally joined the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) at a grand function held at the Sheri-Kashmir International Conference Centre (SKICC), Srinagar.
1 mins
FEBRUARY 22, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Gutyar Village Seeks River-Based Water Supply as Tubewell System Weakens
The demand for a river-based drinking water supply scheme is gaining momentum among residents of Gutyar village in north Kashmir's Baramulla district, as the existing tubewell-based system has increasingly become unreliable.
1 mins
FEBRUARY 22, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
India win four medals at Asian Cross Country in Japan
Distance runner Harmanjot Singh showcased impressive speed endurance but settled for silver in the men's 10km event, as India also bagged three bronze medals at the Asian Cross-Country Championships in Fukuoka, Japan on Saturday.
1 min
FEBRUARY 22, 2026 ISSUE
Listen
Translate
Change font size
