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By AI, Created 3:30 PM UTC, May 19, 2026, /AGP/ – IMARC Group is promoting a fly ash bricks processing plant report that bundles feasibility study, DPR, CapEx and OpEx modeling, and 10-year projections for investors, developers, MSMEs and banks. The company says policy support, low-cost fly ash supply and demand from housing and infrastructure make the business case stronger in India and other markets.
Why it matters: - Fly ash bricks turn coal ash waste into a construction material with lower cost and lower emissions than conventional clay bricks. - Government mandates, green-building rules and infrastructure spending are expanding demand for the product in India and other markets. - The proposed plant model targets investors who want a bankable project plan, including ROI, IRR, NPV and break-even analysis.
What happened: - IMARC Group released a Fly Ash Bricks Processing Plant Project Report as a DPR, setup guide and feasibility study. - The report covers raw material batching, mixing, moulding, curing, quality testing, CapEx, OpEx and 10-year financial projections. - IMARC Group also published a sample request link for the report: Request a sample report.
The details: - The proposed plant is designed for annual output of 50 million bricks. - The report cites gross profit of 30% to 40% and net profit of 15% to 25% after financing costs, depreciation and taxes. - Raw materials account for 50% to 60% of OpEx, while utilities account for 15% to 20%. - The process uses pressure moulding instead of kiln firing. - A typical mix includes 60% to 70% fly ash, 10% to 15% cement or lime, 15% to 20% sand, and water. - Hydraulic presses operate at typically 100 to 200 tonnes and can produce 3,000 to 6,000 bricks per hour depending on configuration. - Water curing usually runs for 14 to 28 days. - Autoclave or steam curing can shorten curing to 8 to 12 hours and raise throughput, but it increases CapEx. - Products described in the report include standard fly ash bricks, high-strength load-bearing bricks, hollow blocks and paving blocks. - The report says Class F fly ash needs lime or cement activation, while Class C fly ash is self-cementitious. - The report also says a fly ash bricks plant needs a batching and mixing area, pressing hall, curing yard, finished goods storage, testing laboratory, utilities and pre-operative costs such as BIS IS 12894 certification and factory registration.
Between the lines: - The pitch depends on a simple economic edge: fly ash is a low-cost input, and in some regions policy pushes suppliers to provide it at minimal or zero cost. - Site selection is a major margin lever because transport costs rise sharply over longer distances. - The business case also benefits from compliance pressure, since green-building frameworks reward fly ash brick usage. - The report is as much a financing tool as a technical guide, since it is built for banks, MSME borrowers and project approvals.
What’s next: - IMARC Group says the report is meant for entrepreneurs, real estate developers, MSME operators and banks evaluating project finance. - The company offers customization through an analyst request form: Ask an analyst for customization. - The report frames India as the biggest near-term market because of housing programs, highway work and state mandates. - IMARC Group links to additional feasibility study reports on zinc ingots, aluminum pipe, EV batteries, TSP, TFT LCD, TMT bar, semiconductor fabrication, SLES, steel forging and vegetable dehydration.
The bottom line: - IMARC is selling a fly ash bricks plant report around a market thesis that combines cheap feedstock, policy support and rising demand for greener building materials.
Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.
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