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laurap

05/06/10 6:56 PM

#10 RE: laurap #9

The Polymer Energy technology was developed by Mr. Zbigniew Tokarz, and is marketed under the T-Technology(tm) brand in Europe. The technology has won several industry awards, including the prestigious 2006 European Environmental Press Award for innovative waste management solutions.
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scion

05/11/10 9:36 AM

#133 RE: laurap #9

NTIC markets a new product line of compounds and finished products based on a portfolio of proprietary bio-plastic technologies under the Natur-Tec(R) brand.

Bioplastic industry remains strong despite recession
Durability under pressure

19 March 2010 12:07 [Source: ICB]
http://www.icis.com/Articles/2010/03/22/9344130/bioplastic-industry-remains-strong-despite-recession.html

Correction: In the article headlined "Bioplastic industry remains strong despite recession," in the 26th paragraph, please read: "The 110m lb/year facility, which will produce PHA-based polymers under the brand Mirel, finally started operations in December 2009," instead of: "The 110m lb/year facility, which will produce PHA-based polymers under the brand Mirel, finally started operations in March." A corrected story follows.

The recession has molded the bioplastics industry into a stronger contender

THE GLOBAL bioplastics industry has proven its flexibility in navigating the recession, as companies restructured, delayed projects or significantly cut costs.

A big accomplishment for the industry last year was that not one major player filed for bankruptcy or completely disappeared, notes Frederic Scheer, chairman and CEO of US-based bioplastic maker Cereplast.

"There were a lot of business activities that still happened last year for our industry, which is remarkable at a time when the chemical industry in general and the plastic market in particular were suffering tremendously from the recession," he says.

Germany-based trade group European Bioplastics pointed out some of the major activities in 2009, such as US producer NatureWorks doubling its polylactic acid (PLA) production capacity to 140,000 tonnes/year; German chemical major BASF introducing new biodegradable plastics for coating paper and shrink film; and Italy-based Novamont launching its second-generation bioplastic Mater-Bi, as well as boosting capacity to 80,000 tonnes/year.

A bioplastics study by Netherlands-based Utrecht University, which was jointly commissioned by European Bioplastics and research body the European Polysaccharide Network of Excellence, and published in June 2009, projected global bioplastic capacity to increase to 2.3m tonnes by 2013 from around 360,000 tonnes in 2007, based on company announcements.

"Important major projects were delayed in 2008 and 2009 due to the financial and economic crisis," said Hasso von Pogrell, managing director of European Bioplastics, in a statement. "Despite the still uncertain data, the study shows the enormous potential for bioplastics."

US market research firm Freedonia released its global bioplastic study in November, projecting that global demand in 2013 would increase to 900,000 tonnes from the 200,000 tonne estimated level in 2008. Jim Lunt, managing director for US consulting firm Jim Lunt & Associates estimates the current global production capacity for bioplastics at 300,000 tonnes.

"The bioplastic industry definitely did not grow as much as expected last year because of the economy," notes Lunt. "Many bioplastic customers who were going to switch last year delayed their plans, while capacity plans such as Metabolix's polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) plant and, Dow Chemical's bio-polyethylene project, and those from several European bioplastic producers have been delayed as well."

Novamont noted a drop in demand for bioplastics in the first half of 2009 - from its European and US customers. Retailers last year were more reluctant to have their warehouses filled, says Stefano Facco, new business development manager at Novamont.

"We were used to having double-digit growth in the last four to five years, but last year, we were able to achieve only single-digit growth worldwide," he notes.

Demand started recovering by the second half of 2009 and the recovery seems to be continuing this year, adds Facco. "We are quite optimistic that it will stay this way for quite some time."
[...]
http://www.icis.com/Articles/2010/03/22/9344130/bioplastic-industry-remains-strong-despite-recession.html