Another remarkable
article from the Converting Curmudgeon. Mark Spaulding is sharing with us UK-based PCI
Films Consulting president Simon King SWOT statement from
his keynote presentation on the“Global Flexible Packaging Market”.
Strengths
- The global flexible packaging
market (at $71 billion in 2011) will grow by around 5.0% a year, reaching
$90 billion in 2016. North America and Central/East Asia will be the top
two regional markets with 25% and 24% shares, respectively.
- Flexible packaging is an
industry relatively immune from global economic downturns.
- In 2016, 42% of the industry
will be in Asian markets, which are growing at about 7% a year — the
fastest growing region is Southeast Asia and Oceania, driven by high
demand in India with 15-20% annual increases.
- The global arena remains
“local” with regional converters supplying the vast proportion of local
packaged-goods customers’ needs. Only 4% of flex-pack production is traded
outside the region in which it is manufactured.
- Amcor, Bemis and Sealed Air are
the top three product converters with 9%, 8% and 4% global market share,
respectively.
- Flex packs’ inherent
source-reduction characteristics (thin materials, lighter weight) allow
packaging-waste reduction over rigid formats.
Weaknesses
- Flexs packs have a reputation
for being hard to recycle — especially multilayer laminated structures
that are often not accepted in curbside recycling programs.
- Higher raw-material costs and
lack of suitable barrier properties of biodegradables and compostables
mean that so far these materials have had little impact.
- Economic uncertainty has
encouraged only short-term buying, just-in-time delivery by customers in some
regional markets.
- Western Europe (and to a lesser
extent, North America) is suffering from low value growth (1-2% a year)
compared to other regions. Volumes are being sustained primarily by
serving only defensive end-use markets.
- Mature flex-pack markets in
Oceania (Australia, New Zealand, Singapore) are growing only 1-2% a year.
Opportunities
- Global personal disposable
incomes are rising, encouraging consumers to buy more packaged goods of all
types.
- Standup pouches, the dominant
format in Western Europe, are a vanguard of positive environmental and
consumer-convenience trends for flex packs.
- High oxygen- and
moisture-barrier, metallized laminates and coextrusions are likely
to extend the value-added sector.
- Multinational brand owners are
sourcing globally, driving inter-regional M&As among converters, or
converters adopting strategies for a global presence.
- Investment in new plants,
equipment in places such as Russia, India, Indonesia is boosting
lower-cost, more-efficient production.
- Converters need to establish
lower-cost production in countries where access to cost-conscious markets
is free (Mexico, Poland).
- Promotion and possible
investment in breakthrough pyrolysis systems are needed to boost this
important new flexible-packaging recycling process for laminates and
aluminum-foil structures.
Threats
- Flex-pack converters must
address environmental issues to cut packaging waste, promote growth in
lighter weight products as cost-effective alternatives to rigid packaging.
- Sustainability has now become
just as important as the above traits.
- Legislative pressures may force
adoption of non-oil-based materials.
- For North America, low-cost
imports from Asia are increasing, especially onto the US West Coast.
Converters with Mexican plants are exploiting the low-cost base to
competitively supply into the US. And growth in imports of pre-packaged
products into the US from Mexico translates into reduced demand for
US-made flexible packaging.
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