Tuesday, 11-Aug-09
Auto suppliers urged to enter alternative energy markets
TRAVERSE CITY, MICH. (August 11, 2009) -- NextEnergy, a Detroit-based non-profit company focused on accelerating investments in wind, solar, battery and other new markets, sends one message to auto
suppliers: Stop making so many auto parts. There are other business opportunities out there that require the same skills as auto parts, but instead call for producing parts for emerging energy
markets.
German machinery exec doesn't expect sharp upswing

Kühmann
CHICAGO (August 11, 2009) -- German-made plastics machinery was booming in 2007 and stayed strong up until the fourth quarter of 2008. But German engineering federation VDMA expects German plastics
machinery to drop about 40 percent for all of 2009, from 2008 levels, measured in euro value.
Gas-assist suit against ADAC dismissed
DETROIT (August 11, 2009) -- A court dismissal has ended a gas-assisted molding patent infringement lawsuit filed earlier this year by two affiliates of Gain Technologies Inc. against automotive
molder ADAC Plastics Inc.
Braskem invests in renewable propylene
SAO PAULO, BRAZIL (August 11, 2009) -- Brazilian petrochemicals company Braskem SA is investing 8.25 million Real (31 million yuan) in research into polypropylene made from 100 percent renewable
materials. The research, which will explore ways of manufacturing propylene, is being partly funded by Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP), says Braskem director of
innovation and technology Antonio Queiroz.
Lithium-ion infrastructure moving ahead
TRAVERSE CITY, MICH. (August 11, 2009) -- With more electric vehicles set to come on line, and the U.S. government parceling out $2.4 billion in grants for next-generation electric vehicles, the next
phase in lithium-ion battery production is getting ready to move from Asia.
After cash-for-clunkers, auto suppliers ramp up output
DETROIT (August 11, 2009) -- Auto suppliers are ramping up production in line with automakers' push to rebuild dealership inventories that have been depleted by widespread production shutdowns this
summer and the cash-for-clunkers program.
Ashley's new factory to use Chinese-made machines
TIANJIN (August 11, 2009) -- Indiana-based Ashley Industrial Molding Inc. is investing about $15 million to open its second plant, a factory in Iowa that will run three mammoth 4,000-ton machines to
compression mold sheet molding compound. The machines were made by Tianjin Tianduan Press Co. Ltd.
SPI offers guide to bioplastics
WASHINGTON (August 11, 2009) — The Society of the Plastics Industry Inc. has created the Bioplastics Industry Overview Guide, a 26-page digital publication that, according to SPI officials, “fills
the void for a comprehensive encapsulation of this relatively new but fast-growing market.â€
Mill Valley becomes 24th Calif. town to ban PS packaging
MILL VALLEY, CALIF. (August 11, 2009) -- Another California city has banned the use of polystyrene take-out packaging. Mill Valley, a town of nearly 15,000 four miles north of the Golden Gate Bridge
in San Francisco, approved a ban on Aug. 3 that will go into effect Nov. 2.
US sets duties on plastic bags from Thailand
WASHINGTON (August 11, 2009) -- In a preliminary ruling, the U.S. Commerce Department has levied the highest possible anti-dumping duty of 122.88 percent on plastic bags exported to the U.S. by Master
Packaging Co. Ltd. of Bangkok, Thailand. The agency said the company did not respond to the agency’s request for information.
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