Even as the third largest cement company in the country, Shree Cement, continues to grow, three generations of the billionaire Bangur family are also working towards a greener way of doing things
Hari Mohan Bangur, MD, Shree Cement (sitting on sofa), with son Prashant Bangur, Joint MD, Shree Cement Image: Debarshi Sarkar for Forbes India
The old office ‘para’ (area) or what is known as BBD Bagh is testament to the old businesses that were built in this part of the city, where once Kolkata’s elite thrived. While many offices have shifted addresses, one that continues to sit grandiosely amongst the old ones is the white heritage building where Benu Gopal Bangur’s family runs its show from, the owners of the third largest cement company in the country and one of the handful of billionaires from Bengal.
It was way back in 1977 that BG Bangur incorporated Shree Cement. In 1983 they commissioned its first plant in Rajasthan and in 1985 it began production. Until then a family business, in 1995 BG Bangur’s family gained full control of the business.
It is 2022, Shree Cement currently produces 46.4 million tonnes per annum, a massive leap from the mere 1.8 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) it produced in 2000. It is now present in Rajasthan, Haryana, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Chhattisgarh. Behind the steering wheel is 70-year-old Hari Mohan Bangur, who has been running the show along with his father since he graduated from IIT Bombay in 1975. Nineteen years ago, in 2003, HM Bangur’s son Prashant Bangur too joined the business.
Sitting in his sprawling office with a huge Cisco monitor on the table, HM Bangur talks about the pandemic. “We were all in panic and it is the first time we saw such a situation where plants had to be closed and nobody knew what will happen and how long it will last.â€
As India businesses downed their shutters during a strict lockdown in March 2020, the first thing Bangur did was simple--calculate how long the company can sustain its cash if operations are restored post six months or one year. The stress test threw up a number, the calculations suggested that their cash pile would survive for the next three years. For a commodity manufacturing company that was a healthy sign.