International Coatings Scene
LATIN AMERICA
BY CHARLES W. THURSTON
LATIN AMERICAN CORRESPONDENT
THURSTONCW@RODPUB.COM
AkzoNobel to expand via strong
sales in Brazil
paint for sprucing up historic buildings and for
hillside slums in Brazil, called “favelas.”
On the heels
of increased
capacity
expansion
plans and
marketing
initiatives,
AkzoNobel is
poised to gain
market share
in Brazil.
AkzoNobel Brasil is expected to earn $1 billion on a double-digit sales increase this year as the result of
strong sales in architectural, automotive,
industrial and maritime paint and coatings. Plans are to plow the income into
capacity expansion and marketing, company officials said. Brazilian sales are estimated to represent about five percent of
AkzoNobel global sales.
The company hopes to increase its production
capacity by one-third, including new investment
in technology, according to Fernando Macedo,
AkzoNobel's director of maritime paints and
coatings in Brazil. While no specific segment
destination was cited, the company is reported
to be planning to invest $56 million this year,
evenly split between new capacity and marketing. AkzoNobel spent about $100 million in
Brazil over a three-year period ending in 2008.
One key destination of the new investment
is expected to be in architectural capacity,
especially to support the Coral premium
brand paint. Premium paint sales represent
30 percent of all architectural paint sales for
AkzoNobel, which has an estimated 25 percent share of the premium paints market,
according to a report by Valor Economico. The
company hopes to increase its market share
by several points this year, in part by increasing points of sales to 23,000 locations, up from
16,000 last year, another report indicated.
In 2008, AkzoNobel acquired the Coral brand
from ICI, adding to its portfolio of brands
including Dulux, Sikkens, Wanda, Ypiranga,
Interpon, International and Glidden.
Jaap Kuiper, president of Akzo Brasil, recently appeared on Brazilian television to launch
the company's “Everything in Color for You”
campaign for architectural paints. Lately, the
company has been donating its Corel brand
“[AkzoNobel] is reported to be planning
to invest $56 million this year, evenly
split between new capacity and mar-
keting. AkzoNobel spent about $100
million in Brazil over a three-year peri-
od ending in 2008.”
The company is also localizing its campaign
with city-specific projects, like the “Everything
in Color for Sao Paulo” drive to help augment
paint use in the capital of Sao Paulo state.
AkzoNobel produces automobile, architectural and industrial paints and coatings at its
Itupeva, Sao Paulo state facility. Maritime
paints are produced at Sao Goncalo, in Rio de
Janeiro state. New sub-lines of the Coral
architectural and Sparlack wood finishes
brands have recently been released, including
zero-VOC products. Among architectural color
launches this year, “Céu Californiano,” or
California Sky, is a major campaign.
AkzoNobel Brasil adheres to the Global
Reporting Initiative to report its corporate citizenship and sustainability practices, which is
strongly followed in Brazil. The company
describes its waste, energy, community, air
quality, services and transportation practices
on a segment-specific level. Among goals of the
company are to increase zero- and low-VOC
products to a level of 30 percent of all sales by
2015, compared to 22 percent in 2009.
AkzoNobel also produces and/or sells paint
regionally in the Southern Cone of South
America in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile and
Uruguay. CW