Could Trump’s border wall be made in Pueblo?

Grupo Cementos CEO says the company is ready to offer Trump its services.

Workers continue work raising a taller fence in the Mexico-US border area separating the towns of Anapra, Mexico and Sunland Park, New Mexico, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2016. Last September, the U.S. Border Patrol began erecting an 18-foot-tall steel fence in this area considered very symbolic to immigration activists and also the site where, for the past 17 years, a binational Mass celebrating Mexico’s Day of the Dead is held to honor the migrants who have died trying to get to the United States. (AP Photo/Christian Torres)

Reuters reported Mexican-based Grupo Cementos de Chihuahua — which has three cement plants in the US, one in Pueblo — is willing to build President-elect Donald Trump’s promised wall between the US and Mexico.

“We can’t be choosy,” Enrique Escalante, Chief Executive Officer of Grupo Cementos de Chihuahua (GCC) said in an interview with Reuters on Nov. 23.

“We’re an important producer in that area and we have to respect our clients on both sides of the border.”

Escalante is the CEO of the company’s American division.

He went on to tell Reuters that Trump was favored by the industry because of the work he might bring, if he keeps his promise of a wall along the 2,000-mile southern border.

GCC was lured to Pueblo by the Pueblo Economic Development Corporation to open a cement plant in the early 2000s. It opened in 2008.

The company, based in Chihuahua, Mexico, employs approximately 85 people at its Pueblo plant, which produces 4,000 tons of cement each day, or around 1 million tons of cement per year.

The company, Reuters reports, is “is 23 percent owned by Mexican multinational cement company Cemex, which at the end of September announced plans to sell its stake.”

70 percent of the company’s sales are made in the US, according to Reuters.

There’s currently no confirmation that Trump has been in contact with GCC, and there are no currently no definitive plans for the wall Trump promised throughout his campaign.