German chemicals in deep structural crisis
25 October 1993 00:00 [Source: ICB]
THE GERMAN chemical industry is in a deep structural crisis,
Hoechst chairman Wolfgang Hilger said at his last report to the
press as president of the chemical industry association, VCI.
Speaking at the VCI annual meeting in Baden-Baden, Hilger
remarked that companies in western Germany are losing ground in
base chemical production to producers in Asia and eastern Europe,
where cost structures are 'considerably more favourable than in
Germany or western Europe'.
VCI companies are now closing older, less profitable plants in
Germany at the rate of 'two to three a week', said Hilger, adding
that, while the first step is to reduce capacities, rather than
quit entire products, it is 'disturbing to observe that in recent
times more profit groups have become unprofitable than new,
profitable products have been developed'.
Due to the poor profit development of the past several years,
German chemical producers have cut back capital spending plans for
Germany by around 20% this year, Hilger said, indicating that
foreign subsidiaries of the German majors have no plans to cut
spending.
At the same meeting, VCI vice president and BASF chairman
Jürgen Strube emphasised that Germany's problems reflect those
of most of the chemical industry in western Europe. He predicts
that the next few years will see further weeding out of
unprofitable products, especially in agrochemicals.
Observing that the chemical industry's traditional customers are
developing their own technological innovations in other parts of
the globe. Hilger expressed reservations about the future role of
chemical production in Germany. He believes that the chemical
industry's best chance to improve business will be to develop more
innovative products. But he added that further concessions are
needed, especially in environmental regulations.
* Meanwhile, Hoechst said that earnings from its key
pharmaceutical businesses plunged in the first eight months of this
year and is therefore being forced to cut 300 pharmaceutical jobs.
Earnings in this sector are only one third of the level seen a year
earlier.
ICIS Copyright © Reed Business Information 2009
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