Toyo Forms New Chinese Subsidiary
Toyo Tire & Rubber Co has announced that it has set up a wholly owned subsidiary in Guangzhou, southern China.
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Toyo Tire & Rubber Co has announced that it has set up a wholly owned subsidiary in Guangzhou, southern China.
Tyres have been made from rubber for more than 100 years, using the same fundamental manufacturing processes. However American tyre corporation, Amerityre, claims to have invented a polyurethane material that will replace rubber and revolutionise the entire tyre manufacturing industry, within the next 15 years.
This proposed polyurethane elastomer tyre production is essentially a unique process. Revolutionary it may be, but what does it mean for the tyre manufacturing industry?
The new polyurethane elastomer material can be used in the manufacture of tyres and automated manufacturing equipment. The significance of the new material is placed on the cost efficiency of the manufacturing process. According to Amerityre, manufacturing tyres from polyurethane is considerably more efficient than manufacturing tyres from rubber.
It may be new to the market, but the company has big objectives for its new technology. The company claims that polyurethane will ultimately replace rubber in tyres. It also predicts that the transition from rubber to polyurethane tyres will occur quickly, because of the amount of benefits it provides. It estimates that this conversion will begin in the next 12 months, and will be complete in the next 12 to 15 years. And on top of this, its prototype tyre, ‘ARCUS,’ awaits its launch into the market and its opportunity to silence critics. Whichever way you look at it, these are high aims for a product the industry knows little about.
The company was originally formed in 1995 as the American Tire Corporation. Its initial business objective was to take advantage of, and develop, existing urethane formulations. At first the company used these formulations to produce Flatfree bicycle tyres from polyurethane foam. In 1999 the company changed its name to Amerityre Corporation. Located in Nevada, it occupies a 49,200 square foot site. And has now developed two distinct proprietary chemical systems for tyres: a polyurethane elastomer and a closed-cell polyurethane foam.
There was good news for Goodyear Tire & Rubber on Wednesday, as its shares closed at a 52-week high thanks to analysts recommending its stock.
The shares closed at $11.42, and were up 44 cents which meant the company’s stock has not closed below its 10-week moving average since late May.
Last month the manufacturer ended a six-quarter losing streak by posting a second quarter profit of $25.1 million, which equated to 14 cents a share, this figure compared with a loss of $53 million, or 30 cents per share, recorded in 2003.
Cooper Tire & Rubber Co has promoted Dwayne Beach to director of product management.
Mr Beach will move from his current position as director of product marketing to assume his new role. He will now be responsible for global product planning and product marketing activities. In his new position he will also lead the company’s efforts in new product identification, development and commercialisation.
As a member of the Product Development and Management Association, and having served on several Tire & Rim Association and Rubber Manufacturers Association committees Mr Beach takes a range of knowledge and experience with him to the new role.
The Tire Industry Association (TIA) has announced that two special events are taking place during the SEMA Show in Las Vegas, Nevada, with each event featuring a cash giveaway of thousands of dollars.
The local membership of the USWA at three US and one Canadian BFGoodrich plant have agreed new labour agreements with Michelin North America. According to Michelin, the new agreements are expected, over time, to yield a 20 per cent annual reduction in the $300 million (£166 million) yearly labour cost at the four union facilities.
After weeks of negotiations, it seems that the Michelin/United Steelworkers of America (USWA) saga could be drawing to a close. The local unions voted overwhelmingly in favour of agreeing to the deal. Of the 3400 USWA members at the three US plants, 70 per cent voted to ratify the agreement. 94 per cent of Canadian members voted to agree to a similar deal at the company’s Kitchener, Ontario plant. Both agreements expire on 22 July 2006.
The USWA sees the agreement as a victory for its members. According to the newly ratified deal, during the course of the agreement Michelin has agreed that there will be not job losses and that it will not close any of the plants. The union also believes the deal will safeguard member’s future job security as it includes an agreement to set minimum capital expenditure to $150 million (£83 million). This is designed to reposition all four plants so that they can increase their production of higher margin, larger sized, branded tyres.
“Although negotiations were long and difficult,” said John Sellers, USWA executive vice president and head of the union’s Rubber-Plastics Industry Conference (R-PIC), “our membership’s patience and determination paid off with a new agreement that preserves jobs and ensures a future for all four plants, which were endangered by foreign imports and lack of investment.
“At the same time,” Sellers said, “we also maintained our members’ living standards and preserved affordable health care for more than 9,000 retirees and surviving spouses.”
Michelin, on the other hand, sees the deal as a challenge for its North American workers. “We know it’s possible for plants to be profitable in North America,” said Jim Micali, chairman and president of Michelin North America. “We’ve been doing it successfully for many years at our Michelin-brand facilities. Now, these four facilities have the chance to step up and prove that they can become competitive with the rest of our North American operations.”
What the USWA didn’t mention was that US workers will be expected to contribute “significantly more” towards healthcare costs, and that Canadian workers will “assume responsibility” for the provincial health insurance premiums. Canadian workers will have to contribute an additional 18 cents per hour towards offsetting healthcare costs. In addition, healthcare premiums for retired US workers will increase, beginning in July 2005 and continuing until December 2006. New employees will also feel the consequences of the deal and will come under a new five-year wage progression programme which will “substantially reduce hourly pay.”
Japanese tyre manufacture, Sumitomo Rubber Industries (SRI) has again improved its half-year results for the six months ended 30 June. In relation to the previous year, sales rose to £1.102 million, compared with £1.069 million previously. SRI’s operating income improved from £65.1 million in the first half of 2003 to £88.2 million in 2004. Almost 74 per cent of the company’s turnover comes from the tyre business unit. SRI’s operating income remains at 58.5 per cent.
Tyre & Accessories has learnt that Guangzhou South China Tire & Rubber Company (SCTR) is planning to build a new factory in July 2004. The move comes as part of the company’s plans to increase production of its popular Wanli tyres. At the moment the company produces around 4.85 million tyres of which two-thirds are radial tyres. The expansion will see production levels increase by
In a strange request, Pierre Dupasquier, head of Michelin Motorsport, suggested that Formula 1 teams should not only be able to use any rubber compound, but also be free to choose which manufacturer’s products they will use. The proposal would give teams the freedom to decide from race to race whether to use Michelin or Bridgestone tyres.
In a recent interview Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co’s CEO Robert Keegan has told Germany’s daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung that the company needs three years to get its US tyre business back on track to healthier profits.
Mr Keegan is reported to have said that Goodyear’s European business was making better progress. The company hasn’t posted a consolidated net profit since 2000, however it managed to record profits in the second quarter from North America and other regions.
Alpharing is Marangoni Tread’s latest innovation. With the use of the new fully automated moulding technology, raw rubber is extruded directly into the core of its ringtread moulds. The concept of retread production technology has undoubtedly been revolutionised by the company. As it makes the move to push sales of the Ringtread range so that it accounts for 70 per cent of its total sales levels, Tyres & Accessories explores what’s behind the new technology and determines what the product can offer to the market.
A-Z Formen and Maschinenbau GmbH Germany has sold its Rubber Extruder Division and the related IPR and know-how to VMI – AZ Extrusion GmbH Germany, a newly founded company which is part of the VMI Group. All staff have been transferred to the new company.
VMI is a supplier of tyre manufacturing and rubber compound handling machinery. Plants operating in Europe, North America and East Asia will now produce the systems. Following the acquisition the VMI Group is now in a position to supply products, process know-how and service to rubber extrusion and retread customers worldwide.
The new company’s production facility and headquarters will be based in Runding Germany, whilst its sales offices will remain in Munich and Akron USA at their existing addresses. Business contacts within both locations will remain the same, however Mr Florian Fischer, currently manager of the Machine Division of A-Z will now become the new general manager. Mr Auke Dalstra, currently VP and CFO of the VMI Group will assist him.
A-Z Formen and Maschinenbau GmbH, has been supplying molds and mold closing systems for the tyre industry, special machinery for tyre mold production and components for the aerospace and other industries for over 40 years and will now fully concentrate on this sector of its business.
Sumitomo Rubber Industries Ltd (SRI) is going to invest £25 million into the increase of production capacities in several of its factories.
According to a German online service, Sumitomo, the second biggest tyre manufacturer in Japan after Bridgestone, wants to respond to growing demand for their products. £15 million will be invested in SRI’s factory in Japan, the remaining £10 million will be allocated to factories in China and Indonesia. The tyre manufacturer says the production capacity will go up by 12 per cent although the time scale in which this will happen is not clear.
In Japan Sumitomo Rubber produces Dunlop brand tyres.
Reuters news agency is reporting that there has been a fire a Bridgestone’s largest tyre factory. The news of the blaze comes less that a year after a huge fire at the Tochigi factory north of Tokyo dealt a significant blow to the firm’s earnings.
The labour dispute between the United Steel Workers of America (USWA) and Michelin appears to have come to an end as the two sides have reached a tentative agreement.
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