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E-Weekly Oct 5th,
2007 Print
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e-Weekly News Briefs Oct. 1-5
By Modern Plastics Editorial Staff
Bayer invests in catalyst research
Noting that almost all of its products are made with
use of a catalyst, Bayer MaterialScience and Bayer Technology
Services have signed a five-year agreement with the Aachen
University’s Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule (RWTH) and
the German state of North Rhine Westphalia to invest nearly €10
million in catalysis research center, which will employ 12
scientists. Bayer MaterialScience and Bayer Technology Services,
will put up €6.05 million and €1.24 million, respectively, with the
German state and Aachen University putting forward €2.7 million.
The center will occupy 400 sq m at the Seffent/Melaten
site of RWTH’s Institute for Technical and Macromolecular Chemistry,
with the lab currently being upgraded and the goal to start research
by the spring of 2008.
Lanxess restructures, cuts Belgian jobs
With its Lustran Polymers business divested, chemical
and plastics supplier Lanxess AG (Leverkusen, Germany) says a
restructuring, which will reorganize its 13 business units into
three—Performance Polymers, Advanced Intermediates, and Performance
Chemicals—will begin in earnest this month. Lanxess plans to invest
€1 billion over the next three years to realize its goals, with 60%
of planned capital expenditures going towards capacity expansions.
Under the restructuring plan, Performance Polymers
will include butyl rubber, polybutadiene rubber, semi-crystalline
products, and technical rubber products, which were contained within
Performance Rubber and Semi-Crystalline Product units. Engineering
Plastics ceases existence. Advanced Intermediates will consist of
the basic chemicals and Saltigo business, while Performance
Chemicals contains inorganic pigments, functional chemicals, ion
exchange resins, leather, material protection products, Rhein
Chemie, and rubber chemicals.
As part of the strategy, Lanxess will realign its
Antwerp unit, letting go of 127 of its employees, with many of those
jobs now being outsourced. The company maintains two sites in
Belgium that employ approximately 1500 in the production of raw
materials for plastics, fiber glass, and rubber chemicals.
Coca-Cola partners for massive PET recycling
plant
Beverage brand name owner Coca-Cola will invest $50
million into what’s being billed as the largest plastic-bottle
recycling plant in the world, with an annual capacity of 100 million
lb of recycled polyethylene terephthalate (PET). Located in
Spartanburg, SC, the site will produce food-grade PET reclaim
suitable for bottle-to-bottle recycling. Coke is partnering with
United Resource Recovery Corp. (URRC; also Spartanburg) on a 30-acre
site that will be completed in 2008. The operation is expected to
create 100 new jobs over the next five years and, once at full
capacity, will generate enough reclaim PET for two billion 20-ounce
Coca-Cola bottles/year.
Founded in 1992, URRC created its patented UnPET
process for chemically cleaning PET flake into a state suitable for
food-grade packaging in 1994. Currently, Coca-Cola uses URCC’s
prototype plant at the Spartanburg site, which has been operational
since 2001. The expanded version will model Coca-Cola’s recycling
facility that opened in Mexico City in 2005, which also applies URRC
technology.
SPI honors safety in plastics plants
Rewarding workplace safety, the Society of the
Plastics Industry (SPI; Washington, DC) has recognized 192
plastics-related work sites. The full list of recipients is
available here,
with 50 Distinguished Safety Awards, 45 Achievement Safety Awards,
40 Merit Safety Awards and 57 Special Recognition Awards presented.
The Distinguished Safety awards are presented to work sites with no
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) recordable
occupational injuries or illnesses involving lost workdays or
restricted work activity in 2006. A 2006 SPI survey includes 2006
occupational injury and illness reports from 279 work sites,
representing 66,466,676 employee hours from 32,736 employees. The
incidence rate was 4.19 work-related injuries and illnesses per
200,000 hours worked, with a severity rate of 69.06 lost workdays
per 200,000 hours worked.
Konarka secures $45 million in financing
Konarka Technologies, Inc. (Lowell, MA), an innovator
in the development and commercialization of ‘Power Plastic’, a
polymeric material that converts light to energy, announced that is
has raised $45 million in private capital financing. “Konarka has
aggressive plans to accelerate the development and commercialization
of our polymer-based organic photovoltaic (OPV) technologies for
consumer, commercial, BIPV and electronic applications,” commented
Rick Hess, president and CEO of Konarka. “This latest round of
financing will help to accelerate our plan to bring Konarka’s
organic photovoltaic material, Power Plastic, to market.”
A new development in the commercialization of Power
Plastic is Konarka Technologies’ agreement with Toppan Forms Co.
Ltd. The two companies signed a joint agreement to accelerate the
development, manufacturing, and commercialization of polymer-based
organic photovoltaic technologies for consumer and electronic
applications. Under the agreement, announced Sept. 10, the mutual
goal is to bring Konarka’ Power Plastic, to market.
Organic photovoltaic material is a thin layer of
polymeric materials, sandwiched between two printed electrodes. It
can be manufactured by traditional printing processes and generates
electricity upon exposure to light. OPV makes it possible for
devices, systems and structures to have their own low-cost embedded
sources of renewable power.
Names in the News
Ivan Drienik, founder and president of
blowmolding tooling supplier R&D Tool and Engineering Co.
(Lee’s Summit, MO) passed away unexpectedly on Sept. 6 at the age of
65. Born in Bratislava in the former Czechoslovakia in 1942, Drienik
became an American citizen and served in the U.S. Army. He founded
R&D in 1976 and grew it into one of the leading suppliers of
packaging tooling. The National Tooling and Manufacturing
Assn. (NTMA) is currently creating a scholarship in his name,
with donations accepted by the NTMA’s Kansas City chapter.
New VP of the German association for plastics
packaging and film producers (IK; Bad Homburg v.d. H.) is Roland
Roth, board member of film extruder RKW AG (Worms). Roth
replaces Rainer Kolar from films processor Bischof +
Klein, who remains on the IK board of directors and is also the
chairman of the trade group Industrial Film and
Packaging.
Elmar Witten has taken the reins at Germany’s
composite plastics trade group, the AVK (Frankfurt),
succeeding Uwe Bültjer, who is retiring after leading the
group for a decade. Witten comes to the AVK from TÜV
Rheinland, and says one goal is to increase the number of
seminars and training courses organized by the AVK.
Fluoropolymer supplier Dyneon, part of
3M, has named Netha N. Johnson as president and
general manager. He takes over from Bill Myers, who become
general manager of 3M Energy and Advanced Materials division in
August.
Several personnel changes took place at polyolefins
supplier Total Petrochemicals (Brussels, Belgium). Carl
Van Camp is now senior VP of the polyolefin division, which is a
merger of the polyethylene and polypropylene business units. He
started working at Total’s predecessor company, PetroFina, in
1983. Francis Raatz is the new senior VP of the company’s
research, technology, and engineering division. This business unit
is a result of regrouping the R&D and the major project
management/engineering divisions.
Tier One automotive supplier Lear Corp.
(Southfield, MI) has named Matthew Simoncini as its new CFO,
reporting to Lear vice chairman, James Vandenberghe.
Simoncini was promoted from his post as VP of global finance and
chief accounting officer. He joined Lear in 1999 when his employer
at the time, United Technologies Automotive, was
acquired.
Bayer MaterialScience LLC (Pittsburgh, PA) has
named John Brandt director of new technologies and strategic
initiatives in its future business group. Brandt came to Bayer in
1988 as a chemist in its coatings division. As recently as 2005, he
worked out of Europe as the head of marketing and sealants for the
EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Asia) region.
In additional personnel news, Bayer appointed
Lennie Scott as manager of environmental governance in its
NAFTA organization. Scott joined Bayer in 1987; in this new role, he
will facilitate environmental work groups for air, water, and solid
waste.
Briefs
Plastics and additives supplier Arkema (Paris)
has acquired Coatex, a producer of high added-value acrylic
polymers. The company has also decided to invest in a polyvinylidine
fluoride (PVdF) plant in Changshu, China set to start up in 2011.
Lando Ferretti, Arkema group president for technical
polymers, says the decision to invest in China was based on expected
growth in the Asian construction market for its Kynar-brand PVdF
products. PVdF indeed appears to be in demand, with Arkema in the
midst of expanding the capacity of its Calvert City, KY facility by
25%. This should be completed in the first quarter of next year.
Automotive parts supplier Toyota Boshoku Canada
Inc., a subsidiary of Japan’s Toyota, has tasked blown film and
coating lines manufacturer Macro Engineering (Mississauga,
ON) to design, manufacture and install a custom-built extrusion
coating line that will be used during the production of new
automobiles. “This is a hugely important order for Macro,” said
Steven Shi, area sales manager for Macro. The line will be
installed in 2008 at a new Toyota facility in Southern ON,
Canada.
The first supplier of formulated color for the
plastics industry to become a partner of the color industry and
designers website, matchmycolor.com, is Carolina
Color Corp. (Salisbury, NC). With the partnership between the
two companies, color professionals should be able to order their
specified color, fully formulated, online. They can also make
contact with experienced plastics masterbatchers for technical
advice.
Processing equipment maker Davis-Standard
(Pawcatuck, CT) has streamlined its customer-service department with
a new system, DS5, designed to help customers avoid lengthy
downtime. The program gives Davis-Standard service personnel and
engineers immediate access to customer equipment via Internet. This
remote diagnostic program allows a quick fix of problems regardless
of machinery’s location around the world, says Tarek Adly,
product manager of the company’s drives and controls division.
Additives and functional fillers supplier Süd-Chemie
(Munich, Germany) has sold its Nanofil-brand organically-modified
bentonite product range to the German subsidiary of U.S.-based
Rockwood Specialties Group, for an undisclosed sum. This
product range is used as flame retardants in wire and cable
applications to optimize the mechanical properties of polyolefins,
and in the film-extrusion sector, improve gas and solvents barrier
properties. German federal antitrust authorities have already
approved the deal.
DuPont Teijin Films (Richmond, VA) has come up
with a proprietary way to customize its Mylar-brand polyester
sealant film to provide controlled respiration. This permits
tailored oxygen transmission rate for a range of fresh cut
vegetables.
Stock shapes manufacturer Quadrant Engineering
Plastics Products (Quadrant EPP; Reading, PA) has expanded its
Fluorosint-brand range of proprietary polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)
shapes for machining with a grade that can operate in extreme
environments and at temperatures from –240°C to 260°C. Fluorosint
HPV is intended for applications such as seals and bearings that
require high wear resistance and low friction.
Laser equipment specialist Trumpf (Farmington,
CT) has acquired 100% of Advanced Fabricating Machinery
(AFM), Canada, a firm founded 1997 and owned since then 50/50 by
Trumpf and Robert Watson. AFM, under the continued leadership
of Watson, will serve the Canadian market as a sales and spare parts
facility for Trumpf products.
Plastics and colorants supplier BASF
(Ludwigshafen, Germany) is expanding its plant for low molecular
weight, highly reactive polyisobutene (HR PIB) at its Antwerp,
Belgium facility. The plant capacity is being increased by 25,000
tonnes/yr to a total of 100,000 tonnes/yr. Start up of the expansion
is planned for March 2008. The material is used in adhesives,
sealants, plastics, and as a lubricant additive.
Dow Chemical (Midland, MI) has acquired
Denmark-based Edulan, an independent polyurethane (PUR)
systems house specializing in rigid foam and elastomer technologies.
In addition to Edulan’s business and production facility, Dow also
acquires rights to all of its formulated and field-tested systems
that it can offer to its own customers. In other news from Dow, the
company has engaged Jacobs Engineering, a design contract
firm, to handle an expansion by 180,000 tonnes/yr of polyols
capacity at its Terneuzen, Netherlands plant. Work is expected to
begin early next year.
Specialty resins and chemicals firm Lanxess
(Leverkusen, Germany) is investing €10 million in an expansion of
its ethylene vinyl acetate copolymer (EVM) capacity, bringing total
capacity at its Dormagen, Germany plant to 15,000 tonnes/yr by 2009.
Fuwei Films Co. Ltd. (Beijing) has installed a
trial BOPET (biaxially oriented polyethylene terephthalate) line at
its Shandong subsidiary. The company will use the line, which can
produce BOPET films with thickness of 12-50 micrometers and widths
from 2.5 to 3.0m, to research new products. The line, which is
designed with an annual capacity of 1500 tonnes, is described as the
first domestic pilot-production line using a multi-channel die for
multilayer film. BOPET film is used to package food, medicine,
cosmetics, tobacco, and alcohol, as well as for the imaging,
electronics, and magnetic product sectors
Polyolefins supplier Borealis has opened a new
sales office in Mexico City to support the growing, local market for
wire and cable. The company says that Mexico is currently investing
in its power and communication infrastructure, boosting the wire and
cable market.
Atlas Material Testing Technology (Chicago)
hosted U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson on Sept. 18 in a
discussion of the importance of trade and investment for U.S. job
creation and economic growth. Atlas was chosen on the basis of its
international presence, with exports to 65 countries and global
operations as well. Atlas has grown exports by 12% annually on
average over the last five years.
Industrial conglomerate Illinois Tool Works
(ITW; Glenview, IL) has expanded its Minigrip/Zip-Pack/Space-Bag
business globally, with the acquisition of Hwa Meir Packing Daily
Commodities Co. Ltd., a manufacturer of storage bags based in
China’s Guangdong province. Hwa Meir produces bags and containers
for reduced-space, home/travel storage, and organization, with
exports to North America, Europe, and the Pacific Rim.
By the end of the year, the Simonazzi,
Alfa, and Gebo brands will exit the plastics lexicon
as Sidel (Le Havre, France) completes its integration process
of Simonazzi, which it acquired two years ago. The combined company
will also create three clusters (the Americas, Asia/Pacific, and
Europe/Africa/Middle East) to handle sales and service globally.
Itself a division of packaging giant Tetra Laval, Sidel,
world’s leading manufacturer of stretch blowmolding machinery, has
5300 employees globally.
DuPont will partner with Plantic
Technologies Ltd. (Melbourne, Australia) to develop resin and
sheet based on Plantic’s high-amylose corn-starch technology.
Potential applications center on packaging, including cosmetics,
personal care, and food packaging trays, caps, and containers. The
partners will co-develop materials, with DuPont marketing and
distributing Plantic’s resin and sheet as part of its Biomax
family. DuPont has a stated goal of doubling revenues from
non-depletable resources to $8 billion by 2015 using internal
products, like its Sorona, as well as partnerships. Plantic’s
technology is based on high-amylose corn starch derived from hybrid
corn, with the starch imparting unique properties to film and
offering biodegradability and compostability.
Global Plastics Bulletin Board
Injection molding simulation software provider
Moldflow is planning a Better Injection Molding Tour
through October, with stops in South Plainfield, NJ (Oct. 15),
Cincinnati, OH (Oct. 16), Milwaukee, WI (Oct. 17), Houston, TX (Oct.
18), and Seattle, WA (Oct. 19). Speakers will include Moldflow’s
Franco Costa, director of CAE development; Scott
Grant, manager of Moldflow Plastics Labs; and Murali
Annareddy, director of product marketing. The event is geared
towards part designers, mold designers, moldmakers, CAE analysts,
CAE analysts, and engineering managers. To register, click
here.
Analysts at Margolis Polymers (Keansburg, NJ)
says that global consumption of vinyl this year is estimated to be
32.7 tonnes (72 billion lb) worldwide, and the 5-year average annual
global growth rate should be 4.8%. These and other results are found
in a new multi-client study, “Polyvinylchloride in the 2010s”
available at http://www.margolispolymers.com/.
While the building and packaging sectors account for most PVC sales,
the study found that there is good growth in other rigid and
flexible PVC markets including agriculture, automotive, footwear,
medical, and recreational areas. “During the first seven years of
the 21st century, PVC has made impressive progress on every front
including sales, customer satisfaction, quality, management
efficiency, process productivity, … and environmental protection,”
says the report. |