23.05.2012 • News

Lanxess Starts Up New NBR Plant in China

German specialty chemicals company Lanxess has started up on schedule a nitrile butadiene rubber (NBR) plant in Nantong, China, as part of its 50:50 joint venture with Taiwan's TSRC Corporation.

The two companies have jointly invested $50 million (approx. €39 million) in the new plant, which has an initial annual capacity of 30,000 metric tons. Some 100 new jobs have been created through the investment.

The two partners set up a joint venture in May 2010 called Lanxess-TSRC (Nantong) Chemical Industrial Company and supplied Chinese customers with NBR produced at Lanxess' La Wantzenau site in France until the start-up of the Nantong plant.

Lanxess is targeting more than €1 billion sales in Greater China (Mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Macao) in 2012. All of the company's 13 business units are represented at 10 sites in Greater China, with close to 1,000 employees in total.

China is the world's biggest and fastest-growing NBR market, with a compound annual growth rate of approximately 10%. Demand is above all being driven by the automotive and construction industries.

 

Innovation Pitch

The Start-up Platform for Chemistry & Life Sciences
Discover Tomorrow’s Innovators

The Start-up Platform for Chemistry & Life Sciences

CHEManager Innovation Pitch supports innovation in the chemistry and life sciences start-up scene. The platform allows founders, young entrepreneurs, and start-ups to present their companies to the industry.

Special Issue

Circular Plastics Economy
Explore the Future of Plastics

Circular Plastics Economy

This special CHEManager issue explores the industry’s pivotal shift towards a more sustainable, circular plastics value chain. Readers will find expert analysis and real-world solutions for today’s most pressing recycling and regulatory challenges.

most read

Photo

VCI Welcomes US-EU Customs Deal

The German Chemical Industry Association (VCI) welcomes the fact that Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, and US President Donald Trump have averted the danger of a trade war for the time being.