DuPont Invests in TiO2 at Altamira
A new $500 million
plant will help
shore up falling
TiO2 supplies.
by Charles W. Thurston
Latin America Correspondent
thurstoncw@rodpub.com
DuPont is making its largest investment in Latin America to date—$500 mil- lion—at its titanium dioxide production
plant at Altamira, in Mexico’s Pacific coast
Tamaulipas state. The new line is expected to
add 200,000 metric tons of TiO2 by 2014.
While the work building a new production
line there continues over the next few years, the
company strategy for customers is increasing
technological assistance to help them use less
product, but better product, according to Paulo
Vieira, the vice president for DuPont titanium
technologies, in Sao Paulo, Brazil. “No one can
build up supplies in the delivery chain now; it is
very tight,” he said.
The demand for more TiO2 in paint
throughout Latin America, and other developing countries, has helped the industry recover
from the global slump two years earlier than expected, Vieira said. Prices per metric ton recently
have risen by approximately $500 to close to an
average of about $3,000.
Feedstock for the Altamira plant will come
from China, South Africa and other countries in
Asia, but no product from Chile’s mines, now
under development, are expected to be purchased over the near term, Vieira noted.
Last year, Brazil alone consumed 49,000
MT of TiO2, while Mexico, Central America
and the Andean countries together consumed
108,000 MT, and the Southern Cone countries
excluding Brazil consumed 192,000 MT, for a
total regional demand of about 400,000 MT,
DuPont estimates.
As disposable income in Latin America
grows, the demand for higher-quality paint is
rising quickly, as the demand for lower-qual-ity paint rose over the earlier part of the past
decade. Part of the credit for this increase in
Brazil is the program now in place to certify
the quality of all paint manufactured in the
country, organized by Abrafati, the national
paint association.
Per capita income in Latin America was estimated at over $11,100 last year, according to
the International Monetary Fund’s World Economic Outlook database. Among the countries
with the highest per capita gross domestic product is Argentina, with more than $15,600, followed by Chile with nearly $15,000, and
Mexico with nearly $14,300. Brazil’s per capita
income is about $11,300.
This strong showing is the result of several
years of economic expansion, which as a region
was about 5. 7 percent last year, and is expected
to slow to a healthy 4.0 percent this year, IMF
statistics indicate.
In the largest cities in the region, per capita
income is rising more quickly than the national
average. Projections by a Price Waterhouse study
on global city GDP rankings indicate that per
capita income in Brasilia will rise to $31,600 by
2025, followed by $28,500 in Monterrey,
$26,800 in Buenos Aires, $21,100 in Santiago,
and over $20,000 in Mexico City, Sao Paulo
and Guadalajara. CW
22 | Coatings World
www.coatingsworld.com
June 2011