Asia drives growth of world BOPP film market
GUILSBOROUGH, ENGLAND (October 6, 2009) -- While growth in the global biaxially oriented polypropylene film market through 2013 is expected to be slow compared to the last five years, Asia's BOPP film producers will see the most opportunities and the Middle East will emerge as a manufacturing center, according to a new report.
The report from Guilsborough-based PCI Films Consulting Ltd. predicted BOPP markets worldwide will grow 5.7 percent a year through 2013, which it believed to be still healthy but a slowdown from the 7.6 percent annual growth rate seen from 2003 to 2008.
The report, "orld BOPP Film Market Trends 2008,"said that prospects could improve if
PCI cautioned, however, that the near term will still be difficult: "veryone will continue to be in a weak position for the next two years but things should start to improve from 2011, for all except producers in the Middle Eastern region."
Overall, the global BOPP industry is expected to expand by one-third by 2013, with the expansion of emerging markets likely meaning a significant change in the who's who rankings of the top producers.
The sharpest cutback seems to have come in Europe's 781,000-ton market, where demand volume dropped 3.1 percent in
Asia, by contrast, showed a 7 percent growth last year, with
One film extrusion equipment maker has already sold 10 lines in 2009, with 375,000 tons of new capacity, the report said. Chinese BOPP film producers will be largely focused on their domestic market.
New capacity in
The
PCI said there will be a "trategic shift" away from traditional suppliers toward companies like Dubai-based Taghleef Industries and emerging competitors in developing economies.
"Producers in these mature markets, previously the market leaders, have had to react to the strategic movements of other players in a way they have never had to do,"the report said. "Larger producers, such as Exxonmobil, Treofan and Vifan, have found that having major assets in markets with slowing growth is not a good strategy but have been very slow to invest in regions with growth."
Companies need to either focus on being a low-cost commodity producer in a large market like





