Rapid growth in demand in emerging markets is driving investment in nonwovens, according to a report in the latest issue of Technical Textile Markets from the business information company Textiles Intelligence.
Several nonwovens roll goods producers are building, or have recently built, new facilities and new lines with the aim of targeting growing demand in markets in Asia, Australasia, the Middle East, North Africa, South America and Southern Africa.
In the Asia-Pacific region alone, demand for nonwoven fabrics is forecast to grow by 9.6 per cent per annum between 2010 and 2015, according to Freedonia Group. Furthermore, China will account for almost half of the additional demand worldwide.
Avgol, an Israel-based spunbond nonwovens producer which has facilities in Israel, China, North America and Russia, has added a second line at its facility in China and a third line is under construction. When the line has been completed, it will bring Avgol’s total production capacity in the country to 40,000 tons per annum.
First Quality Nonwovens, a producer of spunmelt nonwovens with two plants in Pennsylvania, USA, is building a new manufacturing facility at Wuxi in China. Initially the plant will have two machines, the first of which is scheduled to start production this year.
Mitsui Chemicals, a Japan-based nonwovens producer with facilities in Japan and Thailand, plans to establish a new facility in Tianjin, China, for making spunbond nonwovens for the disposable diaper market. The facility is expected to begin operations in September 2013.
Andrew Industries, a UK-based specialist in baghouse filters, has purchased a production plant in Wuxi from the Finnish company Ahlstrom, thereby adding to its dust filtration material assets in China. In addition, the company plans to add a needlepunch line at the plant to make PTFE felts. The new capacity will, in part, support the bag fabricating and distribution facility which was opened in Chennai, India, in late 2011. However, Andrew Industries hopes to add nonwovens production to the Chennai site within the next two years.
Hollingsworth & Vose, a US-based supplier of engineered papers and nonwovens, has formed a joint venture with the Nath Group to build a new mill in Maharashtra, India.
Meanwhile, the South Korea-based Toray Advanced Materials, a wholly owned subsidiary of Toray Industries, added a second line at its Chinese operation in March 2011, and plans to bring a third line on stream at this operation in July next. However, the company’s most recently announced investment is a 20,000-ton line which is planned for Tangerang in Indonesia. The new line is set to start up in June 2013.
Toray’s investments in China and Indonesia are being driven by predictions of rapid growth in demand for disposable baby diapers in member-countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) as a result of strong economic growth in this region.
Asahi Kasei, a Japan-based producer of nonwovens aimed primarily at the diaper market, has begun construction of a new line in Thailand in partnership with the Saha Group. The line represents the company’s first investment outside Japan, and the decision to build it was made in an attempt to reduce costs and improve profitability.
Fibertex, a Denmark-based producer of nonwovens for a wide range of end uses, has recently finished construction of a third spunmelt line at its facility in Malaysia. Production on the line, which will target personal care markets, has been building up. The company has also expanded in the southern hemisphere with a new operation in South Africa to manufacture needlepunched nonwovens for use in geotextiles and products for the South African automotive industry.
From a long-term strategic perspective, the project is expected to serve as a gateway to southern Africa and to countries and regions elsewhere in the southern hemisphere, such as Australasia, India, the Middle East and South America.
Pegas, a spunmelt nonwovens producer which operates nine lines in the Czech Republic, has announced its first foreign investment by revealing plans to build a manufacturing site in Egypt in response to rising demand in North Africa and the Middle East. The company plans to build two nonwovens lines in Egypt. The first will go on stream in late 2013 and the second is due to go on stream some time during 2015-16. Each line will be able to annually make about 20,000 tons of material.