4 January 2010, Aalborg – Danish nonwovens manufacturer
Fibertex is to set up manufacturing and distribution facilities in South Africa,
aimed at giving it easy access to markets which have plans for huge future
investments in, among other things, infrastructure.
From the start of this year, Fibertex will set up business
with a factory in South Africa with a view to manufacturing and marketing
needlepunch products, primarily geotextiles for road works, but also products
for the growing South African automotive industry.
The basis of this initiative is that Fibertex sees a huge
potential in the region. It says that in South Africa alone, plans are in place
to invest more than DKK 500 billion (US$100 billion) in the country’s
infrastructure over the next five years and neighbouring countries have similar
plans in the pipeline.
“This is a significant expansion of the infrastructure in
large parts of southern Africa which will even be further increased in the
coming years. Large road and bridge construction projects etc. have been
launched and more are under way. Geotextiles are essential elements to such
projects and this is where we come in with our high-tech production at
competitive prices”, says Jørgen Bech Madsen, CEO of Fibertex Industrial
Nonwovens.
Mr Madsen expects that local production on a
state-of-the-art facility and sale of geotextiles combined with low production
costs and the extensive expertise of Fibertex Industrial Nonwovens in the area
will make Fibertex in South Africa an attractive supplier and business partner.
Fibertex says that the automotive industry is also
experiencing strong growth in southern Africa and this offers the company good
opportunities to produce different products for the industry which only to a
lesser extent are produced in Africa today.
For Fibertex, which is owned by the industrial conglomerate
Schouw & Co., this is a strategic initiative. After the factory has been
run in and the markets have been penetrated, Jørgen Bech Madsen sees a huge
future potential in the South African campaign:
“We have competent employees with industry experience to run
the factory so we will not be tying up key management resources in the project.
The factory will have a high-tech, state-of-the-art and competitive production
system and we will supply a total Fibertex concept, which means technology and
know-how, both in relation to production and administration,” says Jørgen Bech
Madsen. The factory will have a just over 40 employees.
The annual turnover of the South African company is expected
to be approximately DKK 60-80 million with decent profits in the coming years.
From a long-term strategic perspective, the project furthermore serves as a
bridgehead, not only to southern Africa, but eventually also to other markets
in the Southern Hemisphere such as Australasia, India, the Middle East and
South America.
“As owners, we see a vast potential in this initiative which
both internationalizes Fibertex and makes Fibertex Industrial Nonwovens a local
and regional player able to compete with the other nonwovens manufacturers in
this part of the world,” says Jens Bjerg Sørensen, President of Schouw &
Co.
The South African company is jointly owned by Fibertex, the
Danish Industrialisation Fund for Developing Countries (IFU) and the South
African company Safyr, which is owned partly by local industry specialists and
partly by Industrial Development Corporation (IDC), South Africa’s equivalent
to the Danish State investment fund Vækstfonden. Fibertex will invest approximately
DKK 25 million in the company, acquiring a 26% ownership share. IFU has
previously participated in a similar Fibertex project in Malaysia, and Fibertex
has the option of acquiring IFU’s 25.8% in future.