Indian Packaging Industry

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PACKAGING INDUSTRY ~ INDIA

I. Introduction:
Apart from the huge value addition and employment involved in these activities, packaging has
served the Indian economy by helping preservation of the quality and lengthening the shelf life
of innumerable products - ranging from milk and biscuits, to drugs and medicines, processed
and semi-processed foods, fruits and vegetables, edible oils, electronic goods etc., besides
domestic appliances and industrial machinery and other hardware needing transportation. With
water becoming a consumer product, polymer material-based bottles are becoming a universal
presence.
Heightened competition in all product sectors within the country as also the increasing need to
look for export markets have contributed to the rising demand for appropriate, and at the same
time cost-effective, packaging material and technologies.
The packaging industrys growth has led to greater specialization and sophistication from the
point of view of health (in the case of packaged foods and medicines) and environment
friendliness of packing material. The demands on the packaging industry are challenging, given
the increasing environmental awareness among communities.

II. Classifications ~ Packing Industry in India:


a. Functions of Packages:
Protective Function
Shock, Drop,
Pressure, Vibration
Heat,
Water or Moisture

Convenient Function
Transportation,
Stocking (User, Ware
House), Image, Design, Size
Protection,
After Re-Use Productivity

Graphic Design
Design
Colour
Size

Psychological Function
Attraction

b. Classification of Packaging:
1. By Shape (Form or Size)
Heavy Packaging (Large)
Container
Wooden Packs
Medium Packaging (Middle)

Light Packaging (Small)

Carton Box
Woven Bag
Can, Barrel, Tub

Flexible Packaging
Bottles, Can (Small)
Paper Container

2. By Methods (Way of Packing)

Vacuum Packaging
Aseptic Packaging
Retortable Packaging
Shrink Packaging
Strip Packaging

Gas Flush Packaging


Moisture Proof Packaging
Blister Packaging
Skin Packaging
Tamper Evidence Packaging
Others

Food Packaging
Cosmetics Packaging
Powder Packaging
Toiletry Packaging

Drug Packaging
Liquid Packaging
Clothing Packaging
Dangerous Packaging
Others

3. By Contents

4. By Materials
Rigid Packaging
Bottle, Metal Can
Wooden Box
Metal Box, etc
Semi Rigid Packaging
Carton Box
Plastic Bottle

Flexible Packaging
Paper, Plastic
Film, Alu- Foil
Cellophane

III. Indian Packaging Industry Market:


The Indian packaging industry itself is growing at 14-15% annually. This growth rate is

expected to double in the next two years.


According to the Indian Packaging Institute, Indian Packaging industry is USD 14 billion and
growing at more than 15% p.a. These figures indicate towards a change in the industrial and
consumer set up.
The growth in the packaging industry in India is mainly driven by the food and the
pharmaceutical packaging sectors. The large and growing Indian middle class, along with the
growth in organized retailing in the country are fueling growth in the packaging industry.
Another factor, which has provided substantial stimulus to the packaging machinery industry is
the rapid growth of exports, which requires superior packaging standards for the international

market. With this the need for adopting better packaging methods, materials and machinery to
ensure quality has become very important for Indian businesses.
The Indian packaging industry is dominated by plastic flexible packaging. The traditional rigid
packaging users have also been seen to shift to flexible packaging in recent times. According to
industry sources, the main reasons for this is that flexible packages are found aesthetically
attractive, cost-effective and sturdy. Consumer preference for the use of convenient packaging
and packaged products in affordable quantities in laminates is also one of the main reasons that
have contributed to the growth of flexible packaging in India. The food-processing sector is the
largest user of flexible packaging, accounting for more than 50 percent of the total demand. The
flexible packaging segment is estimated to be growing at over 35 percent annually. Major
players in the flexible packaging sector are Paper Products Ltd. and Flex Industries.
The packaging industry in India is a mix of both organized medium to large players as well as
very small players with a localized presence. The industry is comprised of a large number of
manufacturers of basic materials, converted packages, machinery and ancillary materials.
Domestic demand for packaging has been anticipated to grow rapidly within the next five years.
Recognizing this trend, the industry is gearing itself to adopt scientific and functional
packaging.
Three specific segments can be identified for opportunities in packaging equipment in the
Indian market. The unorganized sector represents the larger opportunity, given the increasing
quality-consciousness of end customers. The cost of equipment and upgrades hold the key to
success in this segment. Large companies, primarily the multinational corporations (MNCs),
which comprise another segment would be guided for the choice of such equipment by the
global policies and standardization of their parent company. The organized segment, which
caters to the major food and pharma companies are conscious about quality and the ability to
produce various packaging products, thereby enabling them to address a larger market.
Market Data:
The Indian market for packaging equipment is characterized by a few large manufacturers with
a nationwide presence along with a large number of small players in the unorganized sector
with a regional presence.
Laminated products including form-fill-seal pouches, laminated tubes and tetra packs are

growing at around 30% p.a.


There are about 600-700 packaging machinery manufacturers, 95% of which are in the small
and medium sector located all over India.
Germany and Italy are the latest suppliers of packaging machinery to India but focus is now
shifting on Taiwan, Korea and China.
Indian packaging machinery imports are USD 125 million.
Indian packaging machinery exports are rapidly growing.
India's per capita packaging consumption is less than USD 15 against world wide average of
nearly USD 100.

The large growing middle class, liberalization and organized retail sector are the catalysts to

growth in packaging.
Food and Pharma packaging are the key driving segments.
Although substrates like plastic have gained vast acceptability, attractiveness of paper and
paperboard consumption remains. Currently, India is ranked 15th in the world for its paper and
paperboard consumption and is expected to improve its rank in the future. Paper is the fastest
growing substrate segment with a growth rate of 6-7%. The total demand for paper currently is
estimated to be around 6 mn tones, of which about 40% is consumed by the packaging industry.
If the demand for paper continues to grow at the same rate, total paper consumption is expected
to reach 9.5mn tones by 2010.
Increasing investments by both domestic and foreign companies in the Indian food processing
sector, especially in beverages, dairy products, processed food, edible oil, and marine products
have expanded the market for packaging machinery.
The food processing industry has
contributed in a major way to the growth of the packaging industry. According to the Indian
Institute of Packaging (IIP), only two percent of Indias total processed food is packaged
compared with 70 percent in western countries. This forecasts large growth in this sector.
Customs Duties:
Tariff
Item

Item Description

Unit

Basic
Duty

Effective
Duty

Additional
Customs
Duty
(ACD)

Counter
vailing
Duty
(CVD)

Cess

Total
Duty
(%)

8422 30 00

Machinery for filling, sealing, or


labeling bottles, cans, boxes,
bags or other containers
Other packing or wrapping
machinery (including heat
shrink wrapping machinery)

Kg

7.50

5.00 *

4.00

14.00

0.60

25.575

Kg

7.50

5.00 *

4.00

14.00

0.60

25.575

8422 40 00

* The effective duty/standard rate is 5.00% vide exemption Customs Notification No. 21/02 dated
01.03.2002, Serial No. 537
Source: 2008-09 Customs Tariff
Packaging Machinery Imports Rising:
Machines for filling, closing, sealing, capsules, etc.
Rank Country

Values in US$ Million


2005-2006

2006-2007

1
2
3

GERMANY
ITALY
SWITZERLAND

9.73
3.01
0.65

16.13
13.8
9.38

% Growth
65.87
358.92
1,336.13

USA

1.67

7.07

324.46

SWEDEN

3.5

4.04

15.39

CHINA P RP

2.92

3.76

28.95

TAIWAN

0.89

3.32

273.15

Total

36.86

70.6

91.53

Other packaging, wrapping machines [incl. heat-shrink wrapping machines]

Rank

Country

Values in US$ Million


2005-2006 2006-2007

GERMANY

13.32

21.91

%Growth
64.46

ITALY

6.95

14.51

108.85

TAIWAN

2.19

2.81

28.22

UK

0.41

2.72

562.46

CHINA P RP

1.4

2.63

88.36

33.89

57.3

69.07

Total

On the packaging machinery side, while a wide range is manufactured in India, the industry
imports machinery, especially at the high end.
Germany and Italy are the largest suppliers of packaging machinery to India but focus is
now shifting on Taiwan and China.
The import (customs) duty for packaging machinery is 25.58% for 2007-08.
Indias imports at 20 & 25% of its total packing machinery import indicate further
opportunities for Italian companies to explore.
Some important Packaging sub-sectors:
I. Corrugated Packaging & Situation in India:
A flourishing organised retail have raised the expectations that consumption of corrugated

packaging will begin to expand again as the number and volume of goods packaged in
corrugated increases. MNCs are demanding corrugated boxes of international standards and
the pattern of buying the packaging is changing.
Prices of corrugated sheet and converted boxes have remained low due to the over-capacity,
manual operations and low productivity. Besides, transport constraints and high freight costs
have meant that small to medium sized corrugated box plants are located near the customers.
The over 4,000 corrugated board and sheet plants are highly labour-intensive, employing
over half a million people both directly and indirectly. The industry is converting about 2
million tons of Kraft paper into corrugated boxes. Factories are spreadout in all parts of India,
even in the remote industrially backward areas.
This present scenario is already being challenged by the sweeping changes that are beginning
to take shape. More and more in-line automatic plants are being set up, as corrugated box
makers gear up to meet the new demands for high precision boxes with attractive graphics
and large integrated production capacities.
Inline Automatic Board and Box making plants will ease out the present semi automatic
production processes.

Deployment of Folder Gluers, Rotary Diecutters will be on the increase.


Use of corrugated for display/promotional packs, POPs and dispensers.
Advances in multicolour, flexo printing will facilitate in-house flexo printing and do away

with screen printing, contract printing on offset presses.


II. Pharmaceutical Packaging & Situation in India
Pharmaceutical packaging occupies a considerable portion of the overall drugs and
pharmaceutical market in India and is growing steadily with the same pace of the industry.
Pharmaceutical packaging consists of various types of glass, pet bottles, strip and blister packs,
injectibles, ampoules, bulk packs, etc.
The Indian pharmaceutical packaging industry is witnessing a spurt in growth. Today, the
packaging industry in India is considered a sunrise industry and its linkages are extensive and
highly employment creating. On one side, it involves manufacture (and sometimes import) of a
wide range of packing material - paper, paperboard, cardboard, a range of polymer products
including rigid and flexible packaging material, aluminium foil, tin and good old wood and
steel. Other backward linkages of packaging including printing, labeling and binding/adhesive
tapes etc. Of course, machinery for making/processing these products and for
packing/packaging is another segment closely linked to this industry.
Growth will follow upward trends in global medication consumption, which will expand at a
strong pace as aging demographic patterns lead to an increasing number of diseases and
disorders. Pharmaceuticals will assume an expanding role in worldwide health care delivery
based on new product introductions and economical advantages over other forms of patient
treatment.
Besides upward trends in medication consumption, the adoption of stricter regulations and
standards governing the production, storage, distribution and labelling of pharmaceuticals will
boost global growth opportunities for packaging products and accessories. Historically,
pharmaceutical packaging requirements focused exclusively on preserving the quality of
enclosed medication. These requirements are now being extended to cover such criteria as the
prevention of product tampering and counterfeiting, the assurance of product dispensing
accuracy and the promotion of patient compliance with product dosage schedules.

IV. Factors Affecting Growth of Packaging Industry in India


1. Urbanization
Modern technology is now an integral part of nation's society today with high-end package
usage increasing rapidly. As consumerism is rising, rural India is also slowly changing into
more of an urban society. The liberalization of the Indian economy, coupled with globalisation
and the influx of the multi-nationals, has improved the quality of all types of primary and
secondary packaging. Also industrialization and expected emergence of the organized retail
industry is fuelling the growth of packaging industry.

2. Increasing Health Consciousness


As people are becoming more health conscious, there is a growing trend towards wellpacked,
branded products rather than the loose and unpackaged formats. Today even a common man is
conscious about the food intake he consumes in day-to-day life.
3. Low Purchasing Power resulting in Purchase of Small Packets
India being a growing country, purchasing power capacity of Indian consumers is lower; the
consumer goods come in small, affordable packages. Apart from the normal products packed in
flexible packaging, the use of flexible in India includes some novel applications not usually seen
in the developed world. Products like toothpaste, toothpowder, and fairness creams in
laminated pouches are highly innovative and are not used elsewhere. Another typical example
of such applications is tobacco and betel nut-based intoxicants and mouth fresheners catering to
unique Indian taste.
4. Indian Economy Experiencing Good Growth Prospects
The Indian economy is growing at a promising rate, with growth of outputs in agriculture,
industry and tertiary sectors. Overall economic growth has proved to be beneficial for the
consumer goods market, with more and more products becoming affordable to a larger section
of the population.
5. Changing Food Habits amongst Indians
Changing lifestyles and lesser time to spend in kitchens are resulting in more incidence of eating
away from homes resulting in explosive growth of restaurants and fast food outlets all over the
country. Indians are trying out newer cuisines and also purchasing similar food items for their
homes. Therefore, the review period has seen new products like pasta, soups, and noodles being
launched in India, fuelling the growth of packaging industry in India.
6. Personal health consciousness amongst Indians:
With growing awareness towards contagious diseases like AIDS and other STDs, awareness
towards usage of contraceptives and disposables syringes have increased the demand for
packaging required for the same.
7. Rural Marketing Pushing Demand for Sachets
India comprises of a big rural market and there has been growing focus on rural marketing,
whereby manufacturers are introducing low-priced goods in smaller pack sizes. Low priced
sachets have proved to be extremely popular in smaller towns and villages, where people do not
prefer to buy larger packs due to financial constraints.
8. Other Prospects
Packaging machines such as automatic form-filling and sealing machines, tetra pack aseptic
packaging machines for sterilized filling and packing of liquids, and testing instruments offer
considerable business opportunities. The Indian packaging machinery manufacturers in the
unorganized sector mostly fabricate general-purpose equipment to serve the basic needs of the
industry.

One area that has been identified as having good market potential is equipment for
manufacturing aluminum beverage cans. Machinery for cleaning and drying containers;
automatic high speed labeling machines and capping machines; sealing machines for cans,
boxes, and other containers; machinery for filling, and closing bottles and cans;
packing/wrapping machines; and moulding machines also offer good prospects.

V. Key Suppliers
Indian imports of packaging equipment consist mainly of highly automated advanced machines
and systems. The major equipment suppliers to the Indian market include Germany, Italy,
Switzerland, and others including Taiwan and the U.S.
Currently, there are an estimated 20 major companies in the organized sector that manufacture
packaging machinery.
Technology, price, delivery, and performance standards are critical
factors that determine whether packaging equipment can be sold in the Indian market. Due to
intense competition in the end-user market, the cost of equipment and low running cost remain
one of the primary factors that influence the sale of the packaging equipment. Upgrading
would be another extremely important factor in the buying decision of Indian end-users. Aftersales service is also a key concern of buyers.
Some of the major domestic equipment manufacturers supplying the market are Flex
Engineering Ltd., (Noida), ITW Signode India Ltd. (Hyderabad), Print Pack Machinery Ltd.
(Faridabad), Eagle Manufacturing Co. (Mumbai), Larsen & Toubro for various type of
packaging machinery; Acrofil India (New Delhi), S.P.M. Engineering (Bangalore), E.C.
Packaging (Faridabad), specifically for filling and sealing machines; S.P Ultraflex Systems
(Mumbai) for flexible packaging machines; and Multi Pack Machines Pvt Ltd. (Hyderabad), and
Primo Pack (Ahmedabad) for pouch packing machines.
Many domestic firms have established joint ventures with foreign companies to produce a
variety of packaging machinery.
German companies are the lead suppliers of machinery for filling, closing, sealing and labeling
bottles, cans and boxes, and wrapping and aseptic packaging machinery. U.S. firms mainly
export filtering/purifying, wrapping, aseptic packaging and form-fill-sealing machines and
extruders.

VI. Prospective Buyers


The end-users may be classified into two sections. The first is the primary section, which may be
further sub-divided into manufacturers of rigid and flexible packaging products. The second
section is comprised of converters of packaging materials or manufacturers that print polyester
or BOPP films. The conversion sector is primarily small-scale and is dominated by companies in
the unorganized sector. This industry converts materials such as plastics, paper, and aluminum
into packaging materials. Economies of scale and the quality level of the converted final

packages represent entry barriers to the conversion sector. Because entry requirements are not
very high as far as technology and capital costs are concerned, it has been estimated that there
are approximately 16,000 players in the unorganized sector alone, accounting for approximately
45 percent market share.
Tetra packs packaging, especially for processed food, is very popular in India. The primary
reason for the popularity of tetra packs is convenience, and longer shelf life. Also, tetra packs
address distribution hurdles in India where distributors face transportation difficulties and
extreme climate conditions. Most of the products sold in tetra packs are produced and sold by
reputed food companies. These companies prefer reliable, branded and tested packaging
machinery and equipment. This represents an opportunity for U.S. packaging machinery
manufacturers.
The Indian market also reveals three other unique end-user segments. The captive packaging
units owned by large companies, primarily MNCs, is one such segment. It is characterized by
the need for turnkey project implementation of packaging equipment to cater to their specific
needs. The choice of the product of the parent company and the product category largely
defines the choice of the type and brand of equipment of this end-user segment.
The unorganized segment probably represents the largest opportunity in terms of volume. As
buyers/end-users become more quality conscious, it will become imperative for this segment to
upgrade its equipment. The key factors that affect sales to this segment are cost of the
equipment, lower processing cost, and being able so seamlessly incorporate the equipment in
facilities. As in all cases, the presence of after sales support would be treated as a prerequisite.
This segment is likely to be extremely price sensitive.
As mentioned earlier, the organized segment catering to the major food or pharma companies,
for instance, is conscious about quality and its ability to produce various packaging products.

VII. Market Entry


Distribution methods have taken on two basic forms. The first form caters to the demand of
many organizations in the organized sector, which is being met largely by a few select
packaging companies in the organized sector and several in the unorganized sector. Because the
unorganized sector is a prime segment for packaging machinery equipment, the distribution
channel needs to be able to meet that demand as well. Manufacturers of indigenous equipment
in the unorganized sector could be prospective partners for U.S. equipment manufacturers.
The second form of distribution primarily caters to the sale and execution of turnkey projects for
captive packaging units for large companies and MNCs.
For new entrants to this industry, joint ventures with Indian companies will provide the
necessary resources to address specific issues such as liaison with Government agencies and
procurement of local products/components and related tasks. For expansion projects, the
knowledge of the Indian partner regarding local procedures helps in positioning the product

accurately.

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