The major change that
has taken place in the coatings industry during the last twenty years has been
the adoption of new coating technologies. Until the early 1970s, most of the
coatings were conventional low-solids, solvent-based formulations; waterborne (latex)
paints, used in architectural applications, accounted for 30–35% of the total.
In the late 1970s, however, impending government regulations on air pollution
control focusing on industrial coating operations stimulated the development of
low-solvent and solvent less coatings that could reduce the emission of
volatile organic compound (VOCs). Energy conservation and rising solvent costs
were also contributing factors. These new coating technologies include
waterborne (thermosetting emulsion, colloidal dispersion, water-soluble)
coatings, high-solids coatings, two-component systems, powder coatings and
radiation-curable coatings.
The following pie
chart shows world production of paints and coatings:
The paints and coatings industry in the United States, Western Europe
and Japan is mature and generally correlates with the health of the economy,
especially housing and construction and transportation. Overall demand from
2011 to 2016 will increase at average annual rates of 1–2% in the United States
and 1.5–2.5% in Western Europe. In Japan, however, consumption of paints and
coatings will experience relatively slow growth during this period (0.3%) as a
result of no growth in major markets such as automotive OEM, machinery and
appliances.
In the emergent countries of the world, coatings are growing at a much
faster rate. The best prospects for growth are in Asia Pacific (8–10% growth
per year in the near future), Eastern Europe (6%) and Latin America (6%).
Growth of coatings in China is expected to continue at 8–10% per year, and in
India and Indonesia at 5–10%. Growth in value terms will be even higher as a
result of the production of relatively higher-valued coatings. Most of the
major multinational paint producers, including PPG, Akzo Nobel, Kansai Paint, Nippon
Paint, BASF, DuPont, Chugoku Marine Paint, Valspar, Sherwin-Williams and
Hempel, have production in China. The multinational producers should gain even
more presence in the developing world as living standards increase and per
capita consumption of coatings rises.
Through the next five years, air pollution regulations will continue to
be a driving force behind the adoption of new coating technologies. Despite the
relatively slow growth in demand anticipated for coatings overall, waterborne
and high-solids coatings, powders, UV curable and two-component systems appear
to have good growth prospects.
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