Ashland Distribution continues to grow in China
By Lauren Hilgers
PLASTICS NEWS CORRESPONDENT
GUANGZHOU (May 26, 2009) -- After weathering a difficult first year in China, Ashland Distribution arrived at Chinaplas 2009 last week with a growing list of distribution agreements in the
region.
In April 2008 alone, Ashland announced agreements in China with Teknor Apex Co., LTL Color Compounders Inc., DSM NV and BASF SE.
In an economic downturn, said Larry Hunt, commercial director of the company in the Western United States, Mexico and Asia Pacific, there are some advantages to being a new arrival.
“If a customer is running only 30 percent, but we didn’t have their business before, that’s still growth,” Hunt said. Ashland Distribution has grown nearly 50 percent in the region since
September, Hunt said, and nearly all growth is due to attracting new customers.
Ashland Distribution announced its expansion into China at last year’s Chinaplas. Of course, as an arm of Ashland Inc., the company’s presence isn’t entirely new. In the past, the company has
served existing clients that happened to be operating in the region.
Today, however, the company has a number of warehouses throughout along with a full sales staff and a sourcing manager. The company’s imported resins run the gamut of applications and include
medical, irrigation, consumer and automotive.
“Every market you could think of,” Hunt said.
In Asia, most of Ashland’s customers are export-oriented, he added, and have been hit hard by the crisis.
Ashland recently reached an agreement to distribute polylactic acid resins for NatureWorks LLC in North America. “Partnering with NatureWorks is a great opportunity for us,” Hunt said. “We’ve
had a lot of requests for green solutions.
“In the U.S., people won’t spend a lot more for green,” he said. “But it’s starting -- people are willing to spend more and more.”
In China, Hunt also sees an increasing demand for eco-friendly products. “Our China-based customers are looking to make a higher quality product,” he said. It helps, Hunt said, that many
companies in the region are starting to feel an upswing in the market. “I think people are starting to feel more and more optimistic,” he said.