Facebook Pixel The Cement Shift | Kashmir Observer - newspaper - Les denne historien på Magzter.com

Prøve GULL - Gratis

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.

- Sheikh Junaid Fayaz

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.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

AI Growth Dividend, Viksit Bharat Target Realistic: IMF Chief

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva on Wednesday said artificial intelligence can lift global growth by 0.8 per cent, and India's goal of becoming a Viksit Bharat or a developed nation is achievable.

time to read

1 min

FEBRUARY 21, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

India-US Interim Trade Pact Likely To Be Operationalised In April: Goyal

An interim trade agreement between India and the US is likely to be signed in March and operationalised in April, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said on Friday.

time to read

2 mins

FEBRUARY 21, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Pakistan Ends Butt's Two-year Ban after Tour Fiasco

The Pakistan government on Friday revoked national hockey team skipper Ammad Shakeel Butt's two-year ban imposed by the national federation (PHF), terming the step as \"illegal and unconstitutional\".

time to read

2 mins

FEBRUARY 21, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

NH Toll Plazas May Go Cashless From Apr 1

NHAI Proposes Only FASTag, UPI Payments

time to read

1 mins

FEBRUARY 21, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

J&K Sees 1.67 Cr Tourists In 2025

Vaishno Devi, Gulmarg Among Top Draws

time to read

1 min

FEBRUARY 21, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

The Cement Shift

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.

time to read

4 mins

FEBRUARY 21, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

Sensex Rebounds 316 Pts, Nifty Ends Above 25,550

Stock markets rebounded on Friday, with the benchmark Sensex closing higher by 316 points after heavy buying in banking and metal shares, amid optimism over progress on a trade deal and India’s participation in Pax Silica.

time to read

2 mins

FEBRUARY 21, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Iran Navy Chief in India, Destroyer Docks in Vizag

Iran’s Navy Commander Rear Admiral Shahram Irani held a meeting on Friday with Chief of India’s Naval Staff Admiral Dinesh Kumar Tripathi.

time to read

1 min

FEBRUARY 21, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

Decoding Washington's Tougher Line on Iran

WIDE ANGLE

time to read

2 mins

FEBRUARY 21, 2026 ISSUE

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Rs 5 Lakh Crore Erosion Spurs AI Workforce Call

India IT at crossroads; Bavisi demands AI shift

time to read

2 mins

FEBRUARY 21, 2026 ISSUE

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size