DÜSSELDORF, GERMANY — Taiwanese blow molding machinery maker Chumpower Machinery Corp. has an aggressive, two-front plan: adding significant manufacturing capacity in China to target the budget end of the market, as it uses Germany's K show to try to take a technological step up.
Chumpower is Taiwan's largest PET stretch blow molding machine maker, and while it's pushing that new technology, it's also adding a manufacturing plant in Jiaxing, China, to fill orders for simpler, cheaper equipment demanded in places like Africa and the Middle East.
First, the technology: Chum¬power claims its combination system can make a bottle using 2.7 watts of electricity, compared with 3.5 watts in traditional combination-style systems.
The breakthrough, Chumpower said, was finding a way to integrate a linear-style blow molding machine into a bottle-making and filling system, which traditionally has required a rotary-style blow molding machine.
The linear machines have a narrower heating pitch, so they can process bottles efficiently, said Peter Pan, Chumpower's R&D director. Linear systems also allow for faster mold changes and require fewer parts to manufacture, potentially cutting down on maintenance problems, he said.
Chumpower is not making the equipment for the entire system, unlike some of its European competitors, but instead is launching partnerships with other companies, Pan said.
For example, the company is working with a Taiwanese feeder maker now, but is open to working with other feeder makers and ancillary equipment suppliers in other parts of the world, he said.
Speaking in an early August interview at the company's Tai¬chung headquarters, company executives said they are preparing to open the Jiaxing factory, their second in China, to meet demand from emerging markets including Africa, the Middle East and Southeast Asia.
The factory will have the capacity to make about 200 machines a year, and the company believes that factory will make Chumpower the largest stretch PET blow molding machinery maker in Asia, measured by number of machines produced, surpassing Japan's Nissei ASB, Pan said.
The company will be able to make 400-450 machines a year at all of its factories when Jiaxing is fully operational. It currently has plants in Taichung, where it focuses on all-electric machines, and Putian, China, which together make about 220-250 machines a year.
Chumpower executives said sales are growing, with enough orders booked through August to have sales of US$50 million this year, up from $40 million in 2011, Pan said.
Some of that's from the all-electric molding machines the company introduced in 2009, but it's also seeing solid demand from newer markets that in many cases seem to be less affected by economic difficulties than Europe or the U.S., Pan said.
"For us, the Middle East, Africa and Asia are fast-growing markets — those markets are still good for us," he said. "The customers in Africa, they want more reliable products. They don't want to spend money to buy European machines. So they come to Taiwan and Korea to buy machines."
The company also has a direct sales office in Thailand with 10 Chumpower employees. Globally, the company has about 450 employees, including 250 in Taiwan.