Talk About Network



Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Culture > Cambodia > SCG eyes conces...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 1 of 1 Topic 13554 of 13691
Post > Topic >>

SCG eyes concessions in Laos, Cambodia

by Chim <ChimS1@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 8, 2008 at 07:51 PM

Friday May 09, 2008

SCG eyes concessions in Laos, Cambodia
NAREERAT WIRIYAPONG

Siam Cement Group (SCG), the country's largest industrial
conglomerate, will seek concessions for eucalyptus forestation in Laos
and Cambodia to secure raw material supplies for its paper business.
Poramate Larnroogroj, managing director of Siam Forestry Co, an
affiliate of SCG Paper, said the company had started growing
eucalyptus in pilot areas in the two countries.


Siam Forestry decided to look abroad after developing about one
million rai of eucalyptus in Thailand, mainly in Kamphaeng Phet,
Kanchanaburi and Khon Kaen.


''We have started discussing the possibility of getting the
concessions there. It would take two to three years to implement the
project,'' he said.


New eucalyptus plantations should be in areas where the wood can be
conveniently shipped to SCG Paper's pulp factories in Thailand's
northern and northeastern regions, said Mr Poramate.


''We are looking to secure raw-material supplies in the long term
after there is no more area for eucalyptus in Thailand,'' he said.
''It is critical to make sure we have enough material for paper
production in the future.''


Material security is a major concern as prices of pulp and other raw
materials for paper production have surged.


Currently, short-fibre pulp is traded at $725 per tonne, up $40 from
the same period last year, while long-fibre pulp prices have risen 15%
to $760, pushed by strong demand and tight supply.


Siam Forestry's short-fibre eucalyptus serves SCG Paper's plants while
long-fibre pulp is imported from Europe and the United States. SCG
Paper has to import scrap paper from the US, Japan, and Singapore
because of inadequate supply locally. Imported scrap prices have risen
to $250 per tonne from $140 a year ago, while domestic prices are up
from four baht a kilogramme to six baht.


SCG Paper, one of the four flagships of Siam Cement, generated total
sales of 12.25 billion baht in the first quarter of this year, up 12%
year-on-year, thanks to higher product prices. However, net profit
fell 20% to 740 million baht due to surging fuel and raw-material
costs.




 1 Posts in Topic:
SCG eyes concessions in Laos, Cambodia
Chim <ChimS1@[EMAIL PR  2008-05-08 19:51:27 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan13V112 Sat May 17 15:27:39 CDT 2008.