Imerys in Asia
Transcription
Imerys in Asia
Imerys in Asia-Pacific Paris, November 28, 2007 1 d Overview of Imerys in Asia-Pacific d Focus on 3 of our businesses • Pigments for Paper • Monolithic Refractories • Minerals for Filtration 2 -IOverview of Imerys in Asia-Pacific 3 Imerys in Asia-Pacific d 3,500(1) employees in 12 countries d A decentralized organization by business with 3 regional support hubs d 50 active mines (including open cast and underground mines) in 7 countries d 46(1) industrial plants for 9 activities – each Business Group represented 4 (1) Including Astron operations in China Steady development since 1999 $M 700 (1) : 600 CA /2007 8 9 9 GR 1 14% + 30% 500 10% 10% 9% 400 9% 8% 8% 415 272 200 100 478 309 6% 3% 670 376 7% 300 10% 181 167 214 207 pr 20 o 07 f (1 orm ) a 20 06 20 05 % of total Group's sales (by destination) es 20 tim 07 at ed Total Group's sales in Asia-Pacific(1) (by destination) 20 04 20 03 20 02 20 01 20 00 19 98 19 99 62 0 5 (1) As if all 2007 acquisition were done on January 07, 1st A profitable growth d Current Operating margin: ≈ 12%(1) d Capital employed : 6% of Group’s capital employed as of Dec 06 d ROCE(2) of Asian assets > Group’s ROCE (1) Forecast 2007 including COI realized on products imported into Asia Return On Capital Employed (2) 6 A step by step development accelerating in 2007 d External growth: approximately €360M since 1999 • Honaïk Malaysia & Thailand • Dalian Jinsheng JV – China • New Zealand China Clay (NZCC) d • Yen Bai Banpu – Vietnam • World Minerals – China • Imerys Ceramics Jiangmen – China • MRD / MRD ECC – Thailand • Siam Refractories – Thailand • Australian Vermiculite ECC Plc (6 operations in Asia) 1999 • Qingyang CY – China 2000 2001 2002 2003 Internal growth / CAPEX above €70M since 1999 • Saraburi plant extension – Thailand 2004 • Jumbo Mining ; ACE – India • Baotou; ZAF; Yilong & Xinlong; Astron – China 2005 2006 • Nanling plant extension & Changshu new plant – China • Kerinci PCC plant – Indonesia 2007 • Zhanjiagang monolithic plant – China • Niigata plant – Japan • Ipoh plant extension – Malaysia • Bhigwan – India 7 A sizable part of Imerys headcount d Breakdown by Asian country(1) New Zealand 1% Japan 2% Australia 2% Indonesia 1% Vietnam 2% Singapore 1% Taiwan 2% Malaysia 4% South Korea 0,3% Thailand 5% India 18% d d China 62% 3,500(1) employees in 12 countries (20% of Imerys headcount) Of which management: 22% 8 (1) 2007 pro forma estimates including Astron All Imerys’ Business Groups active in Asia-Pacific Pigments for Paper Performance Minerals Monolithic Refractories Kiln Furniture Minerals for Ceramics Minerals for Refractories Minerals for Abrasives Minerals for Filtration Graphite Astron d 46(1) industrial sites in 10 countries 9 (1) 2007 pro forma including Astron Asia-Pacific: a comprehensive range of minerals d Complementary portfolio of minerals to support growth and ensure Imerys multi-mineral approach market Paper Paint Plastic Filtration Refractories Ceramics mineral D Andalusite D Ball Clays D Bentonite D D Diatomite D D Feldspar D D Calcium Carbonate D D D D D Halloysite Kaolin D D Vermiculite d d d d D D D D More than 50(1) million tons of minerals resources and 10(1) million tons of mineral reserves, covering short and average terms production Ongoing geological prospecting and sampling work to improve resources and reserves for the long term Significant mining assets acquired in 2007 Mining plans being developed, according to Imerys safety, sustainable and economic criteria (1) As on Dec 2006 as reported in 2006 annual report 10 Asia-Pacific is a huge opportunity for Imerys d The region is the fastest growing region for our businesses d Asia-Pacific markets already represent a large share of worldwide markets 11 Asia-Pacific is the fastest growing region for most of our businesses Worldwide CAGR 2006/2012(2) Asia-Pacific CAGR 2006/2012(2) Paper (P&W production) + 2.1% + 4% Monolithic Refractories(1) + 3.8% + 11% Ceramics + 2.5% + 6% Pigments for Paints & Plastics + 2.9% + 6.8% (1) (2) CAGR 2005/2010 Imerys estimates 12 Asia-Pacific is often the largest region in market size d 36%(1) of global printing & writing paper market d 60%(2) of global market for refractories d 31%(2) of global market in Paints & Coatings d Approximately 50%(2) of global floor tiles market volumes (1) Source: RISI (2) Source: Imerys estimates 13 Imerys’ strategy in Asia-Pacific d d d Objective is: z Capture market growth as fast as possible z Establish leadership to make of Imerys the Asian industrial minerals leader How to do it ? z Acquisitions and/or greenfield projects z Identify strategic reserves to better serve the market z Leverage on our position with our main worldwide customers for greenfield CAPEX (e.g. paper, batteries) Constraints: z Some markets are still fragmented and commoditized i.e. not easily accessible 14 How to find a way forward? d d Quality requirements Specifications ÆCan we engineer an Imerys solution for the local demand? d Availability of reserves d Fragmented customers' base and/or fragmented competition: Æ Can we get a profitable access to the market? 15 Degree of fragmentation Low Way forward in Asia-Pacific Business model potentially viable Refractory No accessible business today Sanitaryware Paper Abrasives Filtration Paint Hi gh Tableware Floor Tiles Degree of commoditisation of the market Low 16 Way forward in Asia-Pacific: business guidelines d Assessment of business risks d Operate in Asia with our Imerys standards: Environment, Health & Safety and Human Resources, whilst maintaining a competitive cost position d Immediately after acquisition, tackle rapidly identified risks areas without compromising with our business rules and Codes of Conduct d Cautious technology and Industrial Property transfers d Be local everywhere: working with Asian managers, engineers, and staff in all functions Æ permanent challenge for Imerys' HR functions 17 HR challenges in Asia-Pacific d Large number of operations – 56 plants and offices in 12 countries – most of them are in remote areas, with many different languages and cultures d Vast area inside the India/New Zealand/Korea triangle d Huge competitive fight for talents in a booming territory where cultural differences are very important Critical HR challenge z Feed our growth with the needed skills and talents in order to cope with our external & internal growth pace z Ensure that Imerys keep growing as a Group: culture, values z Ensure that our Asian businesses comply with our business and ethical standards 18 Ongoing initiatives all over Asia-Pacific d Recruitment in all key function: Sales, Marketing, Operations, Finance, HR, EHS, Audit … d Welcome Session, presenting the Group, its value, culture, business opportunities everywhere in the region, by groups of 50/60 attendees each time (one in China in November 07) d Behave competitively in terms of Compensation & Benefits at all levels z Understanding the local markets (benchmarks, surveys), z Bonus practices, z Benefits, … to ensure increase of loyalty at all levels and mobility in the Group 19 Be leaders in EHS and SD in the region d EHS professionals appointed in all sites and countries, with detailed action plans to measure/improve/foster Safety & Environment procedures and audits z 2 full-time career EHS professionals in China reporting directly to EHS Vice President in Paris headquarters d Constant training z March 2006 – Imerys Safety University in Kuala Lumpur z September 2006 – Behavior-Based Safety Seminar in Bangkok z September 2007 – Imerys Safety University in Shanghai z November 2007 – China Compliance Seminar in Shanghai z 13 on-site safety training events throughout Asia in 2007 d 2008 action plan z Imerys Safety Universities in India and China z Regional environmental training event in China z Training of regional safety support team to conduct 10 on-site events 20 Ensure compliance and control all over the region d Financial, Legal, EH&S, Geology experts have been appointed and are based in our local headquarters in Singapore, Shanghai and Beijing d An audit team of specialists part of our Corporate Audit Department are located in Shanghai, working permanently on audit missions in the region 21 An exciting challenge d Asia-Pacific is a huge growth opportunity for Imerys d Divisions are responsible and empowered to make it happen and corporate ensures strategic push, coordination, consistency, financing and allocation of resources d Let's focus together on three examples z Pigments for Paper z Monolithic Refractories z Minerals for Filtration 22 - II Pigments for Paper in Asia Pacific 23 d Paper Market d Pigments for Paper Market d Critical success factors d Position in Asia and way forward 24 Paper market Asia d Asia is the largest paper consuming and producing region d Asia is the fastest growing region d Printing & Writing (P&W) production should grow on average + 4%(1) in the region d 73%(1) of global growth over the next 5 years will be in Asia d 50%(1) of global growth over the next 5 years will be in China 25 (1) Source: RISI Asia share of global P&W paper demand 2006 - 2012 d Asia represents 36% of the global P&W paper market d More than 73% of the global growth over 5 years is in Asia Global 123.2 CAGR: + 2% 109.0 49.8 + 4.0% (Asia) 39.4 Asia 6.4 5.5 30.5 30.5 4.7 6.0 28.9 30.4 2006 2012 W. Europe E. Europe + 3.2% (L. Am) 49.8 +/- 0% (N. Am) 39.4 12.0 + 5.3% (E. Eur) 9.6 11.8 2.8 15.2 + 1.1% (W. Eur) N. America Asia China + 1.5% (R. of Asia) + 0.6% (Japan) + 3.8% (India) + 6.4% (China) 22.1 2006 . L. America 12.2 3.5 CAGR: + 4% 2012 India Japan R of Asia unit: million tons of paper 26 Source: RISI Drivers for paper growth d d Fast GDP growth led by China Rapid increase in per capita usage in both P&W and B&P z Increased paper usage in offices, advertising and publications z Increased world share in manufactured consumer goods drive packaging % CAGR for P&W paper per capita consumption 7 6 5 4 3 China Rest of Asia 2006-2012 E. Europe Asia (total) 2 1 W. Europe Japan L. America 0 -1 20 40 60 80 100 N. America -2 kg/capita P&W paper consumption 2006 27 Source: RISI Asian capacity vs. utilisation d Asia has become the largest region for P&W paper production with 40 Mt produced in 2006 Asia has 37% of the global P&W paper capacity 100% incremental capacity increase (000's tones) 60 000 98% 50 000 96% 94% 40 000 92% 90% 30 000 88% 20 000 86% average % utilisation rate d 84% 10 000 82% 80% 0 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 P&W Paper capacity 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 average % utilization rate 28 Source: RISI d Paper Market d Pigments for Paper Market d Critical success factors d Position in Asia and way forward 29 Position in Asia d d d 20% of PMP revenue more than 25% of EBIT is derived in Asia d d d Reserve position second to none d Need to further develop competence and sales force for Plastics and Paint segments The market leader in Pigments for Paper Positioned to capture the growth in Asia with the leading customers Strong local technical & marketing competence Untapped potential in performance minerals through strong backbone in mining, processing and logistics created through the Pigments for Paper platform. 30 Geographic distribution of the pigments for paper market in Asia 2006-2012 d d China and India are the fastest growing market in Asia Japan remains an important market especially for kaolin 10.6 7.4 2.0 CAGR: + 6.1% 2.6 + 4.7% (R. of Asia) 2.9 + 2.1% (Japan) 0.3 + 7.0% (India) 4.7 + 10.1% (China) 2.6 0.2 2.6 2006 million ton China India Japan 2012 Rest of Asia 31 Source: RISI and Imerys data Size and growth of regional pigments for paper market Growth is in Asia Growth rate CAGR 5 years % d 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 -1 China Rest of Asia L. Am. Japan 10 Europe 20 30 40 50 North America 60 70 80 90 100 Relative share of global paper pigment market % 32 Source: RISI and Imerys data Why are pigments growing faster than paper? d Coated papers are growing more than uncoated papers driving higher pigment use per ton d The rapidly increasing pulp prices give paper-makers the incentive to maximise use of pigments to save cost (800 USD for Pulp) d In Asia the lack of wood pulp in countries with fast growing paper demand, such as China, will drive more replacement by pigment d New technology and machinery allowing use of more pigments. Rapid replacement of non sustainable existing capacity (9 Mt of straw-pulp based old technology with no or limited pigment usage, mainly in UWF) d Productivity, Printability and improved Optics 33 Asia P&W paper and pigment growth d Growth is driven by woodfree paper (coated and uncoated) z CWF is the primary driver for pigment use z The key pigment used in CWF is carbonates (GCC) Uncoated woodfree Uncoated mechanical Coated woodfree Coated mechanical Total Printing & Writing Paper Mt 23.1 1.6 12.6 39.9 CAGR% 3.2% 4.9% 6.3% 6.7% 4.5% Pigment Mt 1.6 4.2 0.5 6.3 CAGR% 6.0% n.s. 6.4% n.s. 6.3% Note: The numbers refer to P&W paper production and pigment use in P&W papers only. 34 Source: RISI and Imerys data Coated Woodfree is a high end grade Relative Price €/m2 Special Special Grade substitution between MWC/CWF Reels Grade substitution between SC/MFC and LWC BB&&PP CWF CWF UCWF UCWF MWC MWC Woodfree LWC LWC MFC MFC SC SC MFS MFS Mechanical News News Product Class 35 Pigments loading in Asia is due to grow d d Pigment usage is higher in CWF with the highest growth Asia is still significantly below Europe in pigment usage and new Asian machines have higher loading than the European average 40 35 % used in paper 30 25 20 Eur Asia 15 10 5 Eur Asia 0 UWF UM CWF Kaolin CM Avg. P&W Carbonate 36 Source: Imerys data d Paper Market d Pigments for Paper Market d Critical success factors d Position in Asia and way forward 37 Kaolin to paper is a global market d Imerys has the best assets and logistics to address it in Asia Demand: 2.9 Mt Supply: 3.9 Mt Supply: 2.5 Mt Demand: 0.2 Mt d d d Demand: 3.6 Mt Supply: 1.7 Mt Demand: 1.8 Mt Supply: 0.2 Mt Imports to Asia is 1.6 Mt Kaolin is sourced globally for Asia, ~90% is imported Critical success factors are logistics and application competence and customer relationships Imerys is well positioned as a leading supplier Source: Imerys data 38 Carbonates markets are local 8.6 Mt 3.6 Mt + 250 kt/year + 100 kt/year 5.7 Mt + 500 kt/year 0.8 Mt + 50 kt/year d d d Carbonates are sourced locally within Asia Critical success factors are marble reserves, logistics, local processing and application competence and customer relationships Imerys is uniquely positioned as the leading carbonate supplier Source: Imerys data - 2006 use and average growth per year over next 10 years 39 P&W paper production in Asia is dominated by local players d Total market 40 Mt d d d APP NPI Oji Daio Shandong Hokuetsu d Mitsubishi UPM d Hansol April 0 million ton 5 Top-3 are 30% of the market Top-10 are 44% of the market These companies will be the long term winners as they grow organically to capture demand growth and partially replace old obsolete paper capacity Long term customer relationships are critical. Need to play with the top 10 to win The majority of our business is with these companies 10 15 20 40 Source: RISI d Paper Market d Pigments for Paper Market d Critical success factors d Position in Asia and way forward 41 Imerys is uniquely positioned to be successful in Asia d d d d Presence in all the key growth areas Specific local knowledge and operating expertise is critical in each country z Managers in key growth areas are local talent. Technical and mining expertise brought in to “jump start” skills z Imerys is developing local managerial talent to sustain growth z Direct sales presence in 13 countries, 9 Imerys own, 4 country distributors in Asia Rapid acquisition of local and regional high quality marble sources Geographic expansion into high growth markets of India, China, Vietnam 42 Marble mining 43 GCC plant in China 44 Logistics 45 Logistics 46 Asian industrial and sales footprint d 20 sites and 560 employees (2007) Sales office . . . Japan China Taiwan Malaysia Thailand Indonesia Singapore India Australia Vietnam . . Total 1 1 1 1 1 Mining Carbonates 2 1 Kaolin plant 3 3 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 9 1 1 5 2 1 1 14 1 1 .. 47 Marble success factors d Marble is the cornerstone for capturing the GCC growth d High brightness, high purity marble is scarce and in demand z d Marble travels regionally to markets z d Imerys owns or has access to over 90 Mt ton of high quality marble Imerys has developed logistics expertise to move marble regionally and locally especially in China Sound EH&S practices are critical z Environmentally sound, safe and sustainable mining practices secures long term supply and right to operate z It will be increasingly difficult for opportunistic small players to survive, as authorities and customers no longer accept mining accidents and questionable labor and environmental practices 48 BILT, India-Using Carbonates to build a brand d India’s largest papermaker, 50% market share of CWF paper and 30% market share of high-end UWF paper segment. They have 5 sites in India and one in Sabah (Malaysia) d d Their strategy is product leadership, branded products and differentiation Recognized as the leader in innovative products z Both B2B sales and consumer paper sales z BILT has a unique branding strategy d Imerys majority JV with BILT in 2004: Imerys design, built and operate a 60 kt/y GCC plant on-site in Bhigwan to meet 100% of BILT needs d Critical success factors: z Assistance and expertise on using GCC for maximum benefit z High quality marble and proven logistics chain from Malaysia z Technical assistance with their product development z Pigment flexibility GCC usage allows them to differentiate their products to consumers and B2B d BILT is growing: 2008: CWF capacity +190 kt, 2009: UWF capacity +160 kt. We can grow with them 49 UPM Kymmene/Stora Enso-China: Working with Global Customers in a Global way d Stora and UPM first to China since 10 years and lead the way with high quality formulations. Their strategy has been to build a base in China to grow with domestic market and regional exports d UPM Kymmene 2 machines for UFW & CWF in Changshu has a combined capacity of 800 kt/y z d Stora Enso operates a 155 kt/y HQ CWF paper machine in Suzhou z d Imerys is the sole supplier to the 100% GCC coating formulation Critical Success factors: z z z z z d Imerys supplies custom filler GCC to the newest machine which is the fastest uncoated wood-free paper machine in the world. Global relationship and top quality pigments Local sources of high brightness marble Logistics using slurry barges and powder transport Ability to work technically Supply of filler to the fastest paper machine in the world Current project by Stora to expand in Southern China and UPM growth in Changsu are both opportunities for Imerys China 50 April, Indonesia: Value through multi-pigments and integrated supply chain d APRIL operates one of the largest pulp and paper mills in Kerinci, Sumatra, Indonesia. April are cost leaders with advantages in pulp production and forestry. The are value priced paper sellers and leaders in Sustainable Development (WWF partnership) z z d d d 1998, JV Imerys 49/51 APRIL 80 kt/y GCC on-site 2006, 120 kt PCC plant and Imerys acquires majority share Critical Success Factors: z z z z z d 2 million expansion to 4.5 million TPA in 2008 2 paper machines – PM1, April 1998, UWF (400 kt/y) – PM2, October 2006 UWF (415 kt/y) Multi-pigment competence: both machines use proprietary GCC:PCC blends for optimum performance Imerys raw material availability with unique fit to take marble and lime by barge from Malaysia Applications technology and on-site pigment customization April wants to work with partner who uses sustainable mining practices Imerys position in Asia to support April´s geographic expansion April will continue to expand paper capacity in Kerinci on the back of its massive pulp investment 51 The way forward – Pigments for Paper d d Leverage Multi-pigment competence in Asia Focus investments on GCC - there is 400 kt growth p.a. z d Own the marble - world class reserves and mining – More than 80 years of reserves safeguards our growth – Security of supply and sustainability of reserves are key z Logistics is a core competence - continue develop scale and skills z Partner with the customer for “on-site” customization We already have significant local competence in Asia z No help needed from Europe in implementing a turn-key plant project z We are further developing our local P/L leaders to deliver profitable growth z Improving local technical application competence across region d Continue geographic expansion in fast growing areas India, China and Vietnam d Build on Japan 52 Asia Paints and Plastics pigment market Kaolin and carbonate use, million ton d d d 2.4 Mt growth 2006 to 2012 The key mineral is carbonate Plastics is the most promising segment z Greatest volume and growth z Highest quality demands 7.4 Mt Rest of Asia; 1.3 5.0 Mt Japan; 1.0 India; 0.7 Rest of Asia; 1.0 CAGR 6.8% +4.7% +1.4% +9.6% Japan; 1.0 India; 0.4 China; 4.4 +8.6% China; 2.7 2006 d million ton 2012 Build the business to Paints & Plastics on the backbone of Pigments for Paper assets and scale (mine, logistics, processing) We have reached a scale where this is possible 53 Source: Imerys - III Monolithic Refractories in Asia Pacific 54 d Introduction to refractory products & markets d Refractories in Asia Pacific z Refractory market z High temperature industry markets d Calderys d Conclusions 55 What are refractories? d Refractories are used in high temperature industries to protect equipment against heat and are therefore consumed where the production process requires high temperature up to 1700°C in steel making d Refractories vary according to several criteria z Form: shaped and unshaped – Criteria of choice : form of the furnace to line, installation tradition, cost of labour, performance z Chemical type: acid and basic – Criteria : chemical nature of the fluid in contact, tradition, operating temperature, resistance to some chemical attacks (e.g. iron oxide) z Main refractory mineral: alumina-silicates, magnesia, dolomite, graphite, silicon carbide z Degree of refractoriness: depending among others on the purity of the main aggregate and the performance of the “matrix” (binder, filler, additives) 56 Typology of refractory products 68% of world market in volume Bricks Acid Basic Alumina - silicate Magnesia based Special (Sp, SiC,...) Dolomite based Insulating Alumina-silicate 32% of world market in volume Monolithics Special (Sp, SiC,…) Insulating Basic 10% 22% Ready shape 57 Source : Calderys estimates Refractory demand in volume d Demand(1) by geography Others 4% Europe + ex USSR CIS 23% d Demand(1) by industry Power & Incineration 4% Others 17% Cement 5% China 43% Americas 13% India 5% Asia 12% (1) Refractory demand = 28 Mt worldwide in 2006 Source : Calderys estimates Foundry 5% Steel 59% Iron 10% 58 Market description: Iron d Coke oven d Blast furnaces d Tap holes d Casthouse floor d Torpedo ladles 59 Market description: steel d Converters d Electric Arc Furnace d Ladles d Lances d Porous Plug d Tundish d Reheat furnace 60 Market description: foundry & aluminium d Cupolas d Coreless Induction Furnace d Channel Furnace d Ladles d Holding furnace 61 Market description: cement & petrochem d Exchanger d Calciner d Rotary furnace d Cracking unit d Carbon black reactor 62 Market description: Incineration & Power d Waste incinerator d Circulating fluid bed boiler d Bio mass incinerator d Plasma Torch 63 What is a monolithic refractory ? d Unshaped product (vs bricks) d Components (4 to 20 by formula): aggregates + binder + additives z Refractory mineral: tabular alumina, corundum, bauxite, chamotte, magnesia… z Binders – Chemical : resins, phosphate, boric acid… – Hydraulic : aluminous cement z d Additives: deflocculates, accelerators, carbon carriers,… Main installation methods: z Casting z Gunning z Ramming 64 Monolithics vs. bricks Advantages d d Jointless lining (less weak points) Speed of installation z d d d Operations can be restarted sooner Requires less labor to install Necessary for complicate furnace shapes or special items (tap-hole) Flexible use z Different installations methods to adjust to site conditions z Can be casted in a ready-shape for accessories or big pieces Limits d Cannot be used at some places where z shell deformation occurs (rotary kilns) z linings requires high mechanical strength (anode baking furnace) 65 d Introduction to refractory products & markets d Refractories in Asia Pacific z Refractory market z High temperature industry markets d Calderys d Conclusions 66 Share of monolithics is still low in developing Asia 50% 40% World average 32% 30% 20% 10% 0% Europe + ex-CIS Americas Rest of Asia India China Others 67 Source : Calderys estimates Growth in monolithic demand will be predominantly in Asia d d Monolithic Demand(1) (volume) Others Others 3% 3% Europe + ex Europe USSR + ex-CIS 25% 25% China China 35% 35% Change in Monolithic Demand 2010 vs. 2006 kt CAGR 06-10 1400 + 10.5% 1200 12% + 8% 10% 1000 8% 800 6% 600 400 Americas Americas 15% 15% IndiaIndia 4% 4% + 2% (1) Monolithic demand = 9 Mt worldwide in 2006 Source : Calderys estimates + 2.5% 4% 200 2% 0 0% Europe Rest of Asia Asia 18% 18% + 2.3% Rest of Asia India China RoW 68 Factors behind monolithic growth d d End-market growth (next section) Investment in modern equipments that are lined with monolithics z d Substitution of bricks by monolithics z d Pre-heater for cement plant (“dry process”), RH/DH vacuum degasser in steel plant (“Secondary metallurgy”), etc...... Blast Furnace stack, Cement plant, Steel ladles, ... In addition, there is a trend for increased usage of high refractoriness monolithics vs. more simple products due to: z the modernization/size of new equipments z the need to manufacture high quality products not “polluted” by low quality refractories (steel industry – flat vs. long) z the increased awareness of “cost of ownership” (how better refractories contribute to lower operating cost or increased yield) 69 Calderys: the leader in monolithic refractories Asia stronghold Cho- 100 80 360 Siam Refra ctor Qing hua 560 Sun AGC Ce rami cs Kros ak 380 i Shin agaw a Ther mal C er. Fose co ies St G obain ) Cald erys Mine ra Allied Resc o Minte ch Vesu vius RHI ls Global Europe stronghold SEP R( US stronghold Brick basic Brick acid Brick insulating Brick specialities Monolithic acid Monolithic insulating Monolithic specialities => Tap-hole clay Monolithic basic Ready shape Strong World sales in m € 2006 1330 1058 241 Medium 100 <100 370 Low 234 125 115 < 100 70 d Introduction to refractory products & markets d Refractories in Asia Pacific z Refractory market z High temperature industry markets d Calderys d Conclusions 71 3 Groups of countries with different economic profiles d Mature Asia (Japan, South Korea, Taiwan) d ASEAN 4 “Tigers” (Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines) d Booming, Developing Asia (China, India) GDP Growth (%) Total World Developing Asia ASEAN 4 China India Japan South Korea Taiwan, China 2006 (Actual) 5.4% 9.8% 5.4% 10.7% 9.4% 2.2% 5.0% 4.7% 2007 (Forecasted) 5.2% 9.8% 5.6% 11.5% 8.9% 2.0% 4.6% 4.0% 2008 (Forecasted) 4.8% 8.8% 5.6% 10.0% 8.4% 1.7% 5.8% 4.8% Source: IMF, October 2007 72 Position of Asia with respect to the rest of the world Volume of production Steel Ranking (2006) Foundry Ranking (2005) Cement Ranking (2006) China 1 1 1 Japan 2 4 4 India 5 5 2 Korea 6 10 6 Taiwan 12 12 n.a. Thailand 31 21 9 73 Recent surge in steel production driven by China and other developing Asian countries 74 Size of the steel market in Asia – Consumption Share of Asian Countries vs. Total World Steel Output 2002, 2005, 2010 (forecasted) 2002 (Actual) 20% 3% 57% 12% 2005 (Actual) % China % India % Japan % Korea % Taiwan % Oceania % RoW 31% 48% 4% 5% 2% 1% 10% 1% 4% 2% 2010 (Forecasted) % China % India % Japan % Korea % Taiwan % Oceania % RoW 37% 42% % China % India % Japan % Korea % Taiwan % Oceania % RoW 1% 2% 10% 4% 4% Source: IISI 75 Steel growth forecasted to continue at a frenzy pace in China & India d China: in 2002-2006 capacity increased by an average of 63 Mt per year (the average size of Russia's annual steel production during the period) z d Steelmaking capacity is forecasted to rise to above 650 Mt by 2010(1) vs. 500 Mt in 2007 India: steel capacities to increase to 65 Mt by 2009 to meet demand for steel from a growing industrial sector and infrastructure spending z Major investments in new plants made by international players not yet present in India : Arcelor-Mittal (24 Mt) and Posco (12 Mt) 76 (1) Credit Suisse Steel in China is mainly used for domestic needs and not driven by export-oriented customers Chinese demand by end user markets (2006 total apparent steel consumption is 375 Mt) Other 25% Construction 50% Ship building 2% Home appliances 2% Automotive 5% Machinery 16% Source: Ansteel 77 Evolution of the steel product mix in China : need for better refractories d d d 80 The current steel product mix in China is 60% long/40% flat(1) The adoption of new technologies, the modernization of the production infrastructure, and the closure of obsolete production capacities will continue to lead to the production of higher quality steel This higher quality steel – which is to reach the 60/40 Western ratios in 2010 (Calderys estimate) – will drive the need for better refractories 76 in % of Finished 70 65 61 60 60 66 63 60 59 Flats 50 40 40 39 40 Longs 41 37 35 34 30 Sources: CISA, SBB, IISI 24 20 10 0 China (1) CISA, 2007 Russia India EU 25 S. Korea Brazil Japan USA 78 70% of the foundry market is in Asia and still growing Share of Asian Countries vs. Total World Castings 2002, 2005 2002 (actual) 23% 36% 17% 2% 5% 8% 2005 (actual) % China % Japan % India % Korea % Taiwan % Thailand % RoW 9% 29% 30% 2% 7% 15% 8% % China % Japan % India % Korea % Taiwan % Thailand % RoW 9% Source: 40th edition of Census of world casting production 79 60% of the cement market is in Asia Share of Asian Countries vs. Total World Production 2002, 2005 2002 (actual) 42% 42% 1% 2% 2005 (actual) % China % India % Japan % Korea % Thailand % Vietnam % RoW 41% 6% 3% 4% 45% % China % India % Japan % Korea % Taiwan %Thailand % RoW 1% 6% 2% 2% 3% Source: US Geological Survey, Mineral Commodity Summary, January 2007 80 Evolution of the cement production system in China d Modernization, closure of obsolete capacities d Dry route (pre-heated tower requesting monolithic refractories lining) is replacing wet route as it is more energy efficient; it only accounted for 17% of the total cement production in China in 2005 (185Mt vs. 1,050Mt) d Due to the high infrastructure and construction needs, additional capacities will continue to be built in the coming years 81 Forecast for main end markets in Asia Focus on "Booming" Asia d Steel: d d z + 8% growth in global steel output expected for year 2007, with same level of growth forecasted for next year, and a double digit growth forecasted in Asia z The worldwide increase in apparent steel use is largely concentrated in the BRIC countries (+ 11.1% in 2008/07 vs. + 12.8% in 2007/06) Foundry: z Automobile market potential is huge (China, India = world’s top 1 & 2 customer markets with 2007 GDP growth of + 11.5% and + 8.9% respectively) z From 2005 to 2015, China will represent over 50% of world’s growth in the automobile industry z World automobile production 2006/05: China + 28.8%, vs. Korea + 5.5%, Japan + 4%, EU(15) - 1% Cement: z China’s construction boom: by 2015, the World Bank predicts half of the world’s new building construction will take place in China z Major infrastructure and construction requirements in China and India lead to growth rate in cement production around 10% p.a. 82 Market conclusion d Asia is already accounting for a large part of total world production for high temperature industries d The growth in Asia is currently not done at the expense of the mature industrialized countries which on the contrary benefit from the current investment spend by supplying equipments and machines to the zone d Most of the additional capacities will be built in the zone: perspectives are favorable d New capacities are of international standard and will require high-end monolithic refractories 83 d Introduction to refractory products & markets d Refractories in Asia Pacific d Calderys z Calderys Overview z Calderys Strategy in Asia z Taiwan & South East Asia z Japan & South Korea z China z India d Conclusions 84 Calderys milestones From a small and unprofitable European player to a Worldwide # 1 in Monolithics d 2002 - Restructuring Plibrico: profitability and trust recovery d 2005 - Lafarge Refractories (LR) acquisition: large perimeter extension worldwide, capitalizing important synergies d 2007 - ACE acquisition: major step in India, a key developing country 85 Plibrico restructuring and LR acquisition Plibrico d d 2002: restructuring of production and sales followed by substantial profitability recovery and refocusing of its activity Nor sales neither activity in Asia due to historical market (and brand) limitation: z North America: Schaefer family z Asia: mainly Asahi Glass z Europe/South Africa/South America: Imerys Lafarge Refractories d d Biggest European Monolithics player with operations in Asia (plant in Taiwan and sales offices in Japan, China, South Korea) Great synergies potential with Plibrico, but slightly different culture 86 Lafarge Refractories Acquisition - Actions d d New global organization (Feb. ’05) d d d d d d d New company name (Jun. ’05) Set and integrate the sales organization country by country (May ’05) Country administrations in common location (until end ’05) New controlling standards (end ’05) Raw materials savings (end ’05) BU France social plan (until mid ’06) Common standard offer and technical references (mid ’06) Closure of Scheuerfeld – 3rd German plant (Sep. ’06) Savings achieved: €5 million on yearly base, with sales volumes far above the expectations 87 Calderys business model d Management teams (Steering, Executive and Operational Committees) d d d d Decentralisation (Exe. Com. represents 8 different locations) d d d Solutions (package deals) to create long-term customer links Internationality (Exe. Com. 9 citizenships) BU managers fully responsible for business decisions Expertise and innovation ensured by best practise exchange between BUs as well as technical and R&D units Controlling and benchmarking Customer and management international events 88 Calderys is more diversified than the market d d Sales(1) by Geography Africa 9% Sales(1) by Industry Distributors 22% RoW 3% Iron & Steel 39% Asia 19% West Europe 50% Thermal 13% Petrochem 3% East Europe + CIS 19% Cement 7% Foundries 16% 89 (1) 2007 proforma (Calderys + acquisitions) Calderys worldwide d d d Proforma turnover: €477 million Production: 600,000 t/y in 18 plants Employees: ~ 2,100 Oosterhout (NL) Leeds (UK) Åmål (SE) Höganäs (SE) Hangelar (DE) Sézanne (FR) Gijon (ES) Neuwied (DE) Fiorano ((IT) Puerto Ordaz (VE) Katni (IN) Kao-Shu (TW) Nagpur (IN) Vereeniging (SA) Calderys Plants Vladimirovka (UA) Zhangjiagang (CN) Györ (HU) Unanderra (AU) 90 d Introduction to refractory products & markets d Refractories in Asia Pacific d Calderys z Calderys Overview z Calderys Strategy in Asia z Taiwan & South East Asia z Japan & South Korea z China z India d Conclusions 91 Asian business development 2002 2005 2008 Turnover (€ millions) <3 25 100 Employees 2 80 > 700 Manufacturing units 0 1 4 d Major strategic steps: z 2005: LRM acquisition z Set "Solutions & Engineering": team focused on new business approach on the Asian market z 2006: launch of the Chinese plant z 2007: set the new BU Asia with Headquarter in Shanghai. z 2007: ACE acquisition 92 Monolithics target markets Monolithic Market size 2006 k tons € millions CAGR 2007-2012 China 3100 1,250 + 10% India 350 140 + 11% Japan 920 640 + 2% Korea 410 280 + 2% South East Asia (incl.Taiwan) 320 160 + 5% High Attractiveness Calderys Presence Low 93 Phased entry strategy d Calderys entry into new Asian markets is based on a phased approach encompassing four key steps Set up a sales office Expand out of foundry Establish plant Grow by acquisition ? China India Japan Korea ? Taiwan /SEA Export of silica mixes (Sweden) used in foundries; “unique” product Local team build market knowledge and enter I&S and Thermal A plant is built to better serve customer (reactivity, flexibility) and lower cost (local raw materials) Reach market leadership if internal growth insufficient 94 d Introduction to refractory products & markets d Refractories in Asia Pacific d Calderys z Calderys Overview z Calderys Strategy in Asia z Taiwan & South East Asia z Japan & South Korea z China z India d Conclusions 95 Taiwan & South East Asia d d d d 1992: start up Employees: 62 in 2007 Turnover: €12 million Main business: z principally Iron & Steel (China Steel) z Cement and Foundry in SEA d Number 1 on domestic market in monolithics z 9% total Taiwanese share Ping Tung Hsien Plant & Office Production facilities d Alumina line: capacity 30 kt/y d Basic line: capacity 25 kt/y d New Pre-cast shop (2006): capacity 6 kt/y Competitors: d Local (SunWoorld, YohHe…), Siam Ref., RHI, Vesuvius, Allied… 96 Development and opportunities Sales in mTWD Petro- 550 Chem Others Thermal 500 450 Foundry Iron & Steel 400 2005 d 2006 2007 Opportunities: z z z z z New investment in Steel in Taiwan (Dragon Steel and Formosa Steel) South East Asia Cement Synergies with ACE Petrochem market not yet attached Vietnam: opening of new office in 2008 97 d Introduction to refractory products & markets d Refractories in Asia Pacific d Calderys z Calderys Overview z Calderys Strategy in Asia z Taiwan & South East Asia z Japan & South Korea z China z India d Conclusions 98 Japan & South Korea d d d d d d d Established in: 1995 Sales offices: 4 Employees: 17 Turnover: €12 million Main business: Foundry (Calderys absolute leader) Competitors: Choson Refractory, Shinagawa, Asahi… Opportunities: Seoul Office Extend the Japanese and Korean business out of Foundry Acquisitions Promising export activity started in Thailand z z z Tokyo Kobe Office Office Sales in constant mEUR Thermal 12 Others Nagoya 11 Office 10 9 8 2005 2006 2007 Foundry 99 d Introduction to refractory products & markets d Refractories in Asia Pacific d Calderys z Calderys Overview z Calderys Strategy in Asia z Taiwan & South East Asia z Japan & South Korea z China z India d Conclusions 100 Calderys China d d 1st “Wholly Owned Foreign Enterprise (WOFE)” established in Jan ’02 in Shanghai to enter the Foundry segment Xuangang Jiugang Baogang Shougang Tiangang Taigang Changgang Penetration in Iron & Steel is taking place Bengang Angang Chengang Hangang Shougang Tangang Qiangang Jigang Laigang Anyang Meigang Zhangjiagang Plant Nangang Shagang Yonggang Maagang Baogang Shangang Wugang d Employees: 45 in 2007 Pangang Liangang Xianggang Shuigang Kungang d Turnover: €5 million Liugang Xinyu Shanghai OfficeDragon Steel China Steel C 101 China plant d Milestones: z Start-up building: May 2006 z First commercial sales: April 2007 d Data: z Plant area: 20,000m² of which 8,500m² are covered z 2 lines: – Alumina capacity: 30 kt/year – Silica capacity: 7.5 kt/year 102 China development and next steps Sales in mCNY Thermal 60 Others 40 20 Foundry Iron & 0 2005 2006 2007 Steel d Extend the present sales network with regional sales offices d Tight up with local potential partners (JV‘s on specific region or market sectors) d Explore opportunity of JV with steel industry owned or controlled refractory player 103 d Introduction to refractory products & markets d Refractories in Asia Pacific d Calderys z Calderys Overview z Calderys Strategy in Asia z Taiwan & South East Asia z Japan & South Korea z China z India d Conclusions 104 India Calderys India d Established in: 2002 d Employees: 8 (560 with ACE) Delhi Office (ACE) d Turnover: €5 million (€60 million with ACE) Ahmedabad d Main business: Iron & Steel, Foundry Office (ACE) Katni Plant (ACE) Colcotta Office (ACE) d Competitors: Vesuvius India, RHI Pune Nagpur Plant & Office (ACE) Office Chennai Office (ACE) 105 ACE - India the fastest growing refractories market behind China Economic Indicators 2005 2010 CAGR 7.1% GDP growth rate 2005 2010 CAGR Steel (million ton) 38 70 13% Cement (million ton) 142 218 9% Foundry (million ton of castings) 6.1 9.9 10% 2005 2010 CAGR 320 530 11% Production of main refractory users segments Refractory Market Volume Monolithics (‘000 ton) Sources: IISI; Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India – 2005; 40th Census of World Metal Casting Production – 2005; Tata Steel – 2006; Refractories Applications & News – Sep/Oct 2006; Indian Refractory Makers Association (IRMA); Midrex, Calderys estimate. 106 ACE: a leading position in India d ACE is the largest Indian monolithic refractories manufacturer: d ACE domestic sales by segment in FY 06/07(F) z 17% share of the Indian refractories market z 35% share of the Indian monolithic refractories market d Other 26% Iron & Steel 20% Sponge Iron 9% 2006/07F key figures: z Sales: €55 million z EBITDA: €10 million Cement 13% Stockist 32% 107 2007: ACE operations d Katni plant z z Historical site (started in 1951) Capacity: ~ 130 kt d Nagpur plant z Katni SAIL AM Jharkhand Essar Tata SAIL SAIL AM Orissa Posco z Started in 1995, specialized in high grade monolithics Capacity: ~ 45 kt d Corporate & Sales z Nagpur HQ and 5 sales offices Ispat d Outsourcing z JSW 7 suppliers produce 60 kt of bricks and monolithics ACE plants Main steel plants Steel plant projects 108 2007: ACE strategic rationales d ACE monolithic focus and market leader d Complementary assets and product ranges with Calderys d Large “package” sales capability: possible exports to Middle-East and Asia d Successful growth in emerging market: ACE will strengthen Imerys with management pool having strong track record d Goal: build a €100 million business in a few years 109 ACE: Post acquisition actions d Creation of the new BU India d Integration within Calderys d Creation of an international engineering team, based in Nagpur d Upgrade the existing production lines d Organize technology transfer: precast , tap-hole clay... d HR potential: great pool of skilled, flexible, English speaking resources available for further development within Calderys 110 d Introduction to refractory products & markets d Refractories in Asia Pacific d Calderys d Conclusions 111 Calderys is poised for growth in Asia d Large presence in Asia with 4 plants in strategic locations d Best technical skills and solutions due to the extended Calderys network (the largest worldwide) d Local country managers to ensure customers relationship and reactivity on customers demands d Imerys large platform is providing local benchmark and support (legal, HR, raw materials purchasing, network...) 112 - IV Ceramics, Refractories, Abrasives & Filtration in Asia Pacific 113 d Presence and strategy d China: focus by market A z Ceramics z Filtration z Recent developments: Astron China Conclusions 114 Asia Pacific territory d CRAF in Asia Pacific (proforma incl. Astron)(1): z 2007 Sales: € 258 million (18% of total CRAF) z 22 industrial sites z 2,000 employees d Strong focus on China d Decentralized organization 115 (1) By destination CRAF industrial presence in Asia Pacific d A step-by-step acquisition strategy CRAF Site Province / Country Minerals Jiangmen Guangzhou Kerikeri Ranong Lampang Jumbo Guiyang Zhanjiang Korla Korla Alice Springs Guiyang Kaili Zhengzhou Changbai Linjiang Changzhou Baotou Bayuquan (3 plants) Zibo Guangdong, China Guangdong, China New Zealand Thailand Thailand Hyderabad, India Guizhou, China Guangdong, China Xinjiang, China Xinjiang, China Australia Guizhou, China Guizhou, China Henan, China Jilin, China Jilin, China Jiangsu, China Inner Mongolia, China Liaoning, China Shangdong, China Clays / Ceramic bodies 2006 Ceramic bodies 2006 Ceramic bodies 2000 Ceramic bodies 2001 Ceramic bodies 2001 Ceramic bodies 2007 Processing of various late 1990s Minerals for Refractories late 1990s Andalusite 2007 Vermiculite 2007 Vermiculite 2003 Brown Fused Alumina late 1990s Bauxite 2006 Brown Fused Alumina 2007 Diatomite 2005 (with World Minerals) Diatomite 2005 (with World Minerals) Graphite late 1990s Graphite 2007 Various zirconia processed products late 2007 Zircon grinding facility late 2007 d The vast majority of CRAF activity in Asia-Pacific(1) is concentrated in China Æ 54% of sales; 88% of employees and 17 plants out of 22 (1) Post Astron China Established / Acquired 116 CRAF strategy in China d d Establish a local presence either: z to serve non-commoditised products to Chinese customers, when they are ready to pay a price premium for these (generally, this is the case for Western customers established in China, so, doing so, we also accompany these large Western customers in their Chinese expansion); or z to acquire quality, rare, mineral deposits that can be used not only as a business platform in China, but also to export in the region or world-wide, based on a good quality/production cost combination; or z to secure, as much as possible, supply of some strategic raw materials needed by the Group worldwide Filtration Refractory (Andalusite) Ceramics Graphite Abrasives Vermiculite Refractory (Andalusite) Filtration Bauxite (refractory and abrasives) Graphite Favour acquisitions vs. greenfield projects and 100%-owned companies vs. majority-owned joint-ventures Unless the joint venture partner brings a clear advantage, for example on mining rights, or for management transition reasons d Identify strategic local mining deposits 117 CRAF presence in China d All of CRAF’s five Divisions have built a significant industrial and commercial presence in China. Each has its own, independent, management structure locally, with country coordination taking place in the critical areas (Human Resources, EH&S, …) and staffing at business group level for M&A/Development d This has been built over the years, small acquisition by small acquisition d When completed, the Astron acquisition will provide a large (Rmb 1,250 million total revenues), established, sales and distribution platform into many markets (ceramics, refractories, investment casting, …) in China d Our commercial networks in China not only sell local products, they also sell strategic minerals imported from other Imerys' assets 118 CRAF presence in China Low d Degree of fragmentation d Clear move in this direction due to: z expansion by Western customers demanding higher quality products z look for more costs reduction, even by Chinese customers (refractory) z in certain sectors, drive by Chinese government to close small production capacities Question is at which pace? Business model is potentially viable Refractory Abrasives No accessible business today Filtration Sanitaryware Hi gh Tableware Floor Tiles Degree of commoditisation of the market Low 119 CRAF in Asia outside China d Strong commercial and distribution infrastructure in Japan for all of the Business Group’s Divisions d Commercial platforms also in all South-East Asian Countries and South Korea d Production base in Ceramics: z New Zealand: kaolin Æ Asia z Thailand: kaolin / ball clays Æ Thailand primarily z India: feldspar Æ Asia / Middle East / Europe d Vermiculite in Australia d Constant review of growth opportunities primarily in India and certain South-East Asian countries 120 Ceramics A small platform today d Out of the CRAF’s five Divisions, Ceramics is the one with the smallest, least successful presence in China, despite the huge size of the Chinese ceramics industry d d The difficulty to develop a business model stems for the fact that: z except in Sanitaryware, producers in all other ceramics segments are almost all Chinese z they use specific formulations based on low-quality, commoditised, materials, which are widely-available locally z for some of them (ball clays), mining is not lawfully permitted and deposits are very small in size So far, the business model has been therefore to develop small business platforms to blend local minerals with, possibly, imported ones, and help customers to move up-market. This is a slow process; acquisitions of local deposits are continuously being reviewed 121 Refractories Two production units with a different strategic logic d d Our presence in andalusite is recent (February 2007). The deposit is of high-quality, relatively unique in China and dedicated: z first to serve the growing demand in China for high-quality refractories and, hence, refractory minerals (driven by the modernization of the local steel industry) and, z progressively, to be an alternative to our South African production base, in particular to address the Asian market z A project is ongoing to expand production capacity and improve the operations The presence of C-E Minerals for a long time is almost all dedicated to the export market: z Production unit for high-quality bauxite for refractories. While there was, until recently, a large availability of comparable bauxites for exports, US customers have been clearly valuing to have an established US player like C-E Minerals active in this business (quality, consistency, reliability, technical service, …) 122 Fused Minerals An important part of the bauxite sourcing equation d Treibacher Schleifmittel is the world leader in Fused Aluminium Oxydes, half of which (brown fused alumina) being done out of calcined bauxite as the raw material d For Treibacher Schleifmittel, China is, first and foremost, an important part of its supply equation, since it serves a portion of its abrasive-grade bauxite requirements. Therefore, the presence in China was at the beginning (first two plants) dedicated to secure sourcing of calcined bauxite for European plants and of semi-finished crude products for US plants (calcined bauxite fused in an electrical arc furnace) z Treibacher Schleifmittel does not control bauxite mines in China, since these are primarily used for alumina production, so its industrial operations are buying and processing bauxite d Both bauxite and semi-finished crude BFA exports are now more difficult, due to lower availability (shut-down of small polluting operations), political willingness to stop such exports (tax) and freight difficulties d In addition, Treibacher Schleifmittel purchased in June 2007, in a significant move, a final products (brown fused alumina grains) producer to serve its abrasives customers in China and Asia 123 Filtration d d A strong, established, business platform for the local minerals for filtration market z The Chinese diatomite operations of World Minerals have been brought since its acquisition to a reasonable level of profits, despite a quite competitive local environment z For a large part of the business, they manage to sell and price value-added diatomite filtration products to Western/local customers ready to value them and also to take into consideration our better operating standards. A part of the market remains commodity, though The number 2 global player in Vermiculite exporting almost all its production 124 Graphite A developing presence in a critical part of the world graphite industry d China is by far the largest natural graphite producer in the world d Being in China allows Timcal: z to serve locally Western batteries (Duracell) and lubricant customers z to secure its supply of graphite salts to its North American operations 125 d Presence and strategy d China: focus by market A z Ceramics z Filtration z Recent developments: Astron China Conclusion 126 Sanitaryware market in China d Production of sanitaryware in China increased from 18.9M (1991) to 98M pieces in 2006 (36% of world production) : z z Growth in the 1990s was led by quantity at the expense of quality Growth in the 2000s is driven by significant larger exports and higher quality standards The 30 leading producers account for over 50%, and the 5 largest account for nearly 20% of total Chinese capacity d Most of the world’s largest sanitaryware manufacturers have invested in China (TOTO, American Standard, Roca, Duravit, Kohler…); foreign producers account for 22% of Chinese capacity in 2006 d Projected production of 130M pieces in 2010, driven by real estate, housing, and major events (2008 Beijing Olympics and 2010 World Exposition in Shanghai) 120 60 100 50 80 40 Production 60 30 40 20 20 10 0 0 % Million pieces d Exports Exports as % of output 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 127 Tableware market in China d 25 70 60 20 50 15 Output 40 % d Over the past decade, production of tableware in China increased from 11B to 19B pieces in 2006 (60% of world production) ; similar to sanitaryware, growth has been led by exports The porcelain industry is fragmented, with the 30 leading producers together accounting for just 14% of Chinese capacity, and fewer international producers having invested directly in China Domestic demand for porcelain is projected to rise from 6.8B pieces in 2005 to 8.2B pieces by 2010, with a still strong level of exports Billion pieces d 30 10 Exports Exports as % of output 20 5 10 0 0 1960 1970 1980 1990 1996 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 128 Floor Tiles market in China d d d China is the leading producer of tiles worldwide with an output of 2,500 Mm2 in 2005 (36% of the world total), corresponding to a 8% growth per year since 1999 The 30 leading tile producers in China accounted for 38% of national production in 2005. In contrast to sanitaryware and tableware markets, exports accounted for only 15% of output Domestic demand for tiles is forecast to continue to increase, and exports are expected to gain a larger market share 2005 Tiles production worldwide Chinese Tiles production 3 000 2 500 2 500 2 200 Million sq.m 2 000 1 807 1 810 1 868 China 36% Others 39% 2 000 1 600 1 500 Brazil 8% 1 000 Italy 8% Spain 9% 500 0 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 129 Ceramics production zones in China Major ceramics production zones in China 130 d Presence and strategy d China: focus by market A z Ceramics z Filtration z Recent developments: Astron China Conclusions 131 Strategy of filtration division in Asia-Pacific d World Minerals, part of Imerys’ Filtration Division, is present in China for: z The quality of its diatomite deposits z Taking a growing share in a sustained booming economy z Increasing deliveries to Asia-Pacific d Current sales are targeted to: z Subsidiaries of international groups which accept to pay higher-than-local-habits prices as they want an excellent quality and service z Volume sales for lower quality products z For the time being, Filtration focused mainly on filtration applications; opportunities to develop sales in other segments d As the need for quality is dramatically increasing, WM has started to clearly position itself as the best-in-class, benefiting from global expertise z This added-value (quality, service, legal, …) is the main justification to a higher price (+30/50%, with ~20% increase since acquisition) which allowed return to profit 132 WM Chinese and Korean sites overview d World Minerals Asia-Pacific, is present in the area through: z two production sites (one fully owned, one JV), z two imports / exports offices in Beijing and in Seoul z several resale offices in China Celite Changbai Celite Linjiang Beijing Office Sales Offices Celite Korea d Sales: US$21.5 million(1) z 2 plants z 500 employees 133 (1) Sales from Chinese and Korean entities WM China Sales by Market Chemicals-Organic 2% Medicine-PharmaDrugs 2% Food Prep-Restaurant 2% Lube Oil Add. 1% Food-Edible Oil 1% Others 4% M&M-Metals 2% Chemicals-Enzymes 5% Beer 50% Food-Sweeteners-Corn 6% Beverages-Soft Drink 8% Filtration-Distributors 17% 134 Beer production is growing rapidly in China d d Out of a total WM China sales of 27,000 tonnes of diatomite in the domestic market, Beer segment is by far the most significant market and represents 50% of sales in volume Beer production in China was multiplied by 4 between 1992 and 2007, to reach 400 million hectoliters this year (440 million projected for 2008), representing a500€ 8 billion market 450 Beer Output (m.hl.) 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 1992 d d 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 However, alcohol content also dropped from 4.4% to 3% in the same period, due to consumers preference of light beer, so part of the increase is diluted by water Still low standards for consumption per capita and average selling price, confirm a high growth potential for the future 135 Chinese beer production dominated by large brewers d d Consolidation in beer industry reduced the number of brewers from 800 in 1992 to around 90 in 2007 The 7 leading brewing groups contribute 55% of total beer output in China, through nearly 200 plants Main brewers - Market shares (%) 17,5% SAB Miller Huarun Tsingtao 44,7% 10,0% Yanjing Inbev Chongqing-Newcastle 7,0% AB Harbin Heineken 6,5% 4,0% d d 4,5% Others 5,8% Diatomite consumption for those 7 main brewers represent 20.5 kt in 2007 (76% of total Chinese domestic needs) WM sales to those customers amount to 11.1 kt, which means a 54% market share, and 79% of the global WM Asia sales in 2007 136 Filtration in China and Korea d The Chinese market for diatomite and perlite (for Filtration) are estimated at 76kt and 18kt respectively (vs. total world markets of 0.9 Mt and 1.6 Mt) z z d The Korean market for diatomite and perlite (for filtration) is estimated at 13kt and 9kt respectively z d World Minerals holds a 82% share of the diatomite market (11kt). Perlite market is essentially served by four local producers (importers & expanders) In 2007, World Minerals sales in Asia Pacific amounted to US$38 million of which z z d The diatomite market is very competitive World Minerals holds a 36% share of the Chinese diatomite market (~ 27kt) but is not today a significant player on the perlite market which is served by a number of local producers. US$ 22 m from local assets US$ 16 m from US assets WM Asia Pacific has currently 500 employees in the area, approximately 90% of them working in the mining and production operations (underground mining with reduced mechanical assistance) 137 World Minerals in China (WM China & FTC) Background d WM is present in China through six legal entities: z z z d Two diatomite production companies located in Jilin province: Celite Linjiang (fully owned) and Celite Changbai (owned at 72% by WM), plus LinLin JV. One company in charge of the imports into China of the WM’s Group products: Shanghai Trading Co (FTC) Two BJ office companies d z z Securing major diatomite deposits Tapping into the growing Chinese filtration market Exporting to the whole Asian market Celite Pacific and Celite Korea are displayed next slide Celite Linjiang operations: z z z d z z d z Imports to Asia Pacific 30 373 40% Imports to China 1 247 2% d Chinese Domestic Sales 27 000 36% Plant capacity of 21kt - operating at 80% of capacity 193 employees Owns mining rights (2007-2017) on underground mineral deposit with reserves of 5 years + exploration rights Support functions are mainly carried out of the Beijing office: z WM AP 2007F Sales Volumes Breakdown Plant capacity of 40kt - operating at 60% of capacity 266 employees Owns mining rights (2006-2016) on underground mineral deposit with reserves of 5 years + exploration rights Celite Changbai operations: z Those entities were set up in 1994-1995 with the aim of: z d Operations 34 employees in Beijing, incl. sales people located throughout China and one engineer in Linjiang 5 employees in Seoul (Celite Korea Limited) Summary Financials d d 2007F Sales Volume: 44.6kt 2007F Sales: US$ 23m (including local production and imported products) Chinese Exports to Asia Pacific 16 371 22% 95% of the diatomite sold is used as a filter aid 138 World Minerals in China and Korea Overview - Celite Pacific d Legal entity created in 1994 to handle the Chinese production JVs exports z z Managed out of the Beijing office Also employs some WM AP Managers serving certain Asian market and based in Beijing Overview - Celite Korea d Sales office located in Seoul z z d d d Summary Financials - Celite Pacific Imports diatomite from China (now up to 71% of the imports in volume) and the US (29% in volume) Act as an agent for direct sales from other WM subsidiaries into Korea Headcount of 5 employees 2 salesmen 3 employees covering general administration Summary Financials - Celite Korea d 2007F Sales Volume: 11.1kt d 2007F Sales Volume: 10kt d 2007F Sales: US$ 8m d 2007F Sales: US$ 6m d Celite Pacific acts as the sole exporter for WM’s Chinese production facilities, while Celite Korea is WM’s Korean resale office 139 WM China : key production figures Plants Linjiang Product Natural, Calcination, Flux Calcination Natural & Flux Calcination Changbai Mines Ore Capacity (metric tons/month) Headcounts Ownership 3,500 133 100% 2,100 121 71.8% Capacity Headcounts Ownership Liudaogou Semi White / Grey 3,200 133 100% Maanshan Grey 1,500 72 71.8% Xidapo(1) White 1,500 18 71.8% (1) Under development 140 Chinese DE market overview Total ~ 76 kt/a Old Changbai 5% Lvjiang 5% Dahua 5% Others 5% WM; 27kt; 36% Hengtai 5% Jiang Yuan 5% Xin Hua 6% Hua Tong 8% Xin Hui 20% 141 (1) Asia except China Asian(1) DE market overview Total ~ 115 kt/a Chuo Silika; 13kt ; 11% Zem lite 3% Grefco 4% Other Chinese 1% WM; 44.6kt; 39% EP; 16kt ; 14% Show a; 32kt ; 28% 142 d Presence and strategy d China: focus by market A z Ceramics z Filtration z Recent developments: Astron China Conclusions 143 Astron China d Imerys has announced in August the signature of an agreement(*) for the acquisition of Astron China, a large producer of zircon-related products d Astron China Sales represent € 110 million in 2007(**)Æ + 20% vs 2006 2007 Sales by geographical zone Asia 3% Others 1% North America 11% Europe 13% China 72% (*) Closing is expected to take place around year-end (**) Financial year ending June 2007 144 Astron China d Astron has a strong growth track record and represents an excellent fit with Imerys existing products portfolio z fused zirconia will add to UCM’s recently acquired capacities, and is a good complement to Imerys’ existing refractories, abrasives and ceramics product range z milled zirconia could be sold as part of our ceramic products range into frits and glazes (together with kaolin, ball clays and feldspar) z zirconium chemicals have a wide customer base, including Paper and Performance Minerals 2007 Sales by product Others 2% Zircon Flour 12% Mineral Sands 24% Zirconium Chemicals 19% Fused Zirconia 21% Titanium Products 22% 145 Astron China overview d Astron imports zircon sand in China, distributes part of it, processes the rest with different levels of added value, into zirconium products through its Chinese factories network and distributes those products into the Chinese (72% of sales in 2007) and export markets PRODUCT LINE Mineral Sands 07 SALES 07 CONTRIBUTION f € 51m f 46% of total Sales CAPACITY END USES f Import of feedstock for titanium dioxide and of unprocessed zircon sand f Ceramic pigment f Refractory for the steel and glass industry (Stabilised Fused Zirconia) SALES GEOGRAPHIC BREAKDOWN (%) f China: 100% Fused Zirconia f € 23m f 21% of total Sales f 12,000 tpa f 8,000 tpa additional capacity to come on line in 2008 f China: 52% f Europe: 28% f North America: 12% f Ex-China Asia: 8% Zirconium Chemicals f € 20m f 19% of total Sales f 22,000 tpa f Catalysts, deodorants f Paper, paints f Advanced ceramics, electronics f North America : 49% f Europe: 38% f Ex-China Asia: 9% f China and RoW: 4% Zircon Flour f € 14m f 12% of total Sales f 18,000 tpa f Ceramic opacifier in frits or glazes f TV glass f China: 99% f RoW: 1% Others (High Purity Zirconium and Fused Silica) f € 2m f 2% of total Sales f High purity zirconium: lasers and vacuum coatings f Fused silica: High-end refractories f China: 65% f Europe: 32% fRoW: 3% Total Astron f € 110m f China: 72% f Europe: 13% f North America: 11% f Ex-China Asia: 4% Source: Astron annual report 146 Astron China operations d Astron processing facilities are all located in China : z Zircon flour grinding facilities in Zibo (Shangdong) and Bayuquan (Liaoning), close to the centres of Chinese ceramic industry z Zirconium chemical and fused zirconia plants in Bayuquan d Astron’s Chinese sales network consists of 8 regional sales offices and 17 warehouses d Headquarters in Shenyang, 1,000 km north of Beijing d 580 employees in China 147 Astron China operations (Cont’d) SHENYANG BAYUQUAN ZIBO ZHENGZHOU YIXING SHANGHAI QUANZHOU Regional sales offices CHAOZHOU FOSHAN Production sites Headquarters 148 Astron China d d The acquisition of Astron provides Imerys with: z A strong sales, operations, logistics and distribution platform in China, into several key markets such as ceramics, refractories and investment casting z It also brings an experienced, strong, Chinese management team z Further investment and development opportunities around Astron in China are under review Through its preferred relationship with the seller, Astron Ltd, Imerys also gets access to a deep worldwide zircon sand sourcing knowledge 149 d Presence and strategy d China: focus by market A z Ceramics z Filtration z Recent developments: Astron China Conclusions 150 Conclusions d We will continue to capitalize in most of our markets in Asia on the strong underlying growth z dynamic internal demand z drive towards higher quality products (Filtration, Refractories,…) z move from Western customers (even, possibly, in Tableware now) d We will focus most of our developments on high-quality, controllable, mining deposits d In China, we will leverage on our future Astron China platform. In general, we expect a lot in 2008 from our 2007 acquisitions (Yilong, Xinlong, ZAF, Jumbo, …) d Beyond China, a lot of attention will be given in 2008 to: z Vietnam: growing economy, rich mineral resources, good logistics into China z India: better internal logistics, more moves from Western customers, use Jumbo as beach head into Ceramics 151 Imerys in Asia-Pacific Paris, November 28, 2007 152