中文 | PLASTICS NEWS.COM  
 
Saturday
November 21, 2009
News
China Home
China Blog
Business/Economy
Materials
Machinery
Molds/Tooling
Design/Innovation
Environment
Beijing Olympics
Calendar
Opinion
K show Webcast
Trade Associations
End markets
Automotive
Packaging
Consumer Products
Computers/Telecom
Electrical/Electronics
Medical
Building/Construction
Processes
Injection Molding
Extrusion
Blow Molding
Thermoforming
Rotational Molding
Services
About Us
Contact Us
Classified Ads
Advertise
Privacy Policy
Story Reprints
This site is published by Plastics News, Crain Communications' international newspaper for the plastics industry.
 
Machinery
 E-mail this story Printer-friendly version
 
China's rotomolders looking to modernize
By Steve Toloken
PLASTICS NEWS
 

Wang Kai
WENZHOU, CHINA (September 22, 2009) — China’s rotational molding industry says it is looking for foreign investment, to boost its technology and tap unmet domestic demand the small firms in the sector have trouble meeting.

China’s small and largely domestic-oriented rotomolding sector has thus far had little foreign investment, but in interviews at a recent industry conference, executives said they are looking for foreign capital and partnerships to boost a sector they said has made some innovations but has generally been forced to develop on its own.

Industry officials said the sector has been growing, driven in part by China’s sizable infrastructure needs and metal replacement in the marine industry and other areas.

While solid data on the industry is hard to find, organizers of the 2009 China Rotomolding Conference, held Sept. 14-15 in Wenzhou, Zhejiang province, estimate resin consumption will grow 20 percent annually for the next five years, from a base of about 50,000 metric tons now (110.2 million pounds).

Luo Hongyu, general manager of one of China’s largest rotomolding firms, Cixi Deshun Container Co. Ltd. in Ningbo, Zhejiang province, said China’s industry would like more foreign involvement.

He said a group of about 60 Australian rotomolding executives toured the country in 2005 and concluded that the technology level was still low, but Luo said that is changing, as companies have upgraded and more foreign buyers have come to China to source.

“In recent years Chinese rotomolders have developed fast, and we think now is the time to invest,” he said. “We want a chance to cooperate with foreign factories.”

Deshun last year built a factory to make rotomolding equipment and molds, expanding beyond its previous focus only on making rotomolded products.

He said the company saw a gap in the quality of machines available locally and also has been exporting its machines, to Egypt, Malaysia, Spain, Indonesia and Algeria.

Another Chinese equipment maker, Fangda Rotational Molding Co. Ltd. of Yantai, Shandong province, said the local industry’s development has been hurt by a lack of good design and good engineering.

Fangda General Manager Lin Baoshu said there is a lot of unmet demand in China’s local market, for infrastructure, construction and water treatment projects, where foreign firms could enter the market: “We have not had enough good and new products to supply the market.”

Chinese rotomolders have made good investments in improving design and the industry has developed quickly and can meet some of the domestic needs.

But he said China lacks a university program, like the rotomolding program at the Queen’s University of Belfast in Northern Ireland, which could supply a foundation of theory and scholarship to help companies advance.

He said he exports his equipment to Russia, Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia and Germany.

The lack of foreign involvement in China’s industry contrasts with India, where foreign firms are starting to set up joint ventures in rotomolding, according to interviews Plastics News conducted at an industry conference in India in February.

Lin, who said his chief machinery competitors are from India, said language could be a barrier to foreign investment in China’s sector.

Bao Zhicheng, editor of the rotomolding trade journal and Web site China Plastics Information and a conference organizer, said foreign firms may also worry about their intellectual property in China. Other officials at the conference said it remains hard for foreign firms to set up nationwide sales networks in China.

Another Chinese rotomolding industry official who travels frequently to the United States and Europe said it’s tough in China to get good quality rotomolding material, including linear low density olyethylene, and it can be challenging getting good workers.

Wang Kai, head of roto- and injection molder Shanghai Terrui Mechanical Equipment Co. Ltd. in Shanghai, said he sees opportunities in China in areas like sewage systems, where manhole equipment currently made of concrete or brick could be rotomolded.

His company makes rotomolded products for farming, including a drinking system for animals made from polyurethane and polyethylene, which the company is talking with distributors about exporting to the United States and Europe.

Wang also has a business importing more than 30 shipping containers a month of hay from the American state of Washington to Chinese dairy farmers in the Yangtze River Delta.

He said the Chinese rotomolding market would be open to foreign investment: “Anything to help the market develop more quickly — this market needs more players. The competition is not sufficient so this market cannot expand properly.”



[ Machinery ]
 
The PN China Blog








Material Insights

PN reporters Frank Esposito and Bill Bregar cover NPE's possible move.
NPE2009 videos
NPE2009 videos Plastics News' extensive coverage of NPE2009, North America's largest plastics trade show, included 17 news videos shot on-site in Chicago. View the English-language clips here.
Partners
 

Home | About Us | Contact Us | Privacy Policy

Entire contents copyright 2009 by Crain Communications Inc.
All rights reserved.               Terms & Conditions

For information about this web site contact webmaster@plasticsnews.com