EVEN as most
industries are clocking double-digit growth, the domestic paper
industry is still chugging along in a single-digit growth
trajectory. Pradeep Dhobale, chief executive of ITC’s paperboard and
speciality paper business, who has just taken over as the new
president of Indian Paper Manufacturers Association spoke to Vivek
Sinhaon the status of the industry and the way forward.
Even as the
economy is on a high growth trajectory, the paper sector is still on
a single-digit growth path. What are the key constraints?
The main reason is
that the raw material situation is not comfortable and we are not
able to take large positions. This is due to the current model of
raw material development — ‘farm forestry’. For growing faster we
need to have a capacity push as in China where people have added
millions of tonnes of capacity. For large-scale expansions we need
largescale investments in the range of $1 billion as against Rs
500-600 crore that is happening now. And for that, we need to have a
comfortable position with respect to raw material. But there are
some positive developments with the proposed model of
‘multi-stakeholder partnership,’ which is awaiting policy clearance.
When that happens, the industry will respond and we should be able
to achieve double-digit growth.
So far we are in the
zone where GDP growth and paper industry growth is matching. But
when per capita GDP crosses $1,000, history shows that demand
multiplier in paper industry goes above one. So if GDP grows by 8%
paper consumption grows by 10%. We are approaching that inflexion
point.
The domestic paper
industry is highly fragmented. What are the prospects of
consolidation?
Consolidation will
happen over a period of time but I don’t see it happening over the
next 2-3 years. The large players have announced their brownfield
expansions with most of them going for borrowed funds. However, that
is not enough given the growth and in that scenario there can be a
shakeout with mergers and acquisitions after sometime.
As far as
international players are concerned, the Indian market is becoming
attractive to them. Indian market is today growing three times the
rate of the global average. But putting up a large project and
delivering on it, MNCs would face the same problems of raw material
that we face.
Domestic paper
prices are close to the all-time high, clocked during mid-’90s. Is
there any scope for further upward movement?
Last one year, there
has been an upward movement where the supply demand scenario allowed
it to happen but we have still not absorbed the full cost of the
increase in raw material and energy cost. On an average, prices have
gone up by about Rs 2,500 per tonne over a period of one year. The
input cost has gone up more than that. We have been able to improve
on our profits through internal efficiency measures. But there is
still scope for upward movement of prices as internationally also
writing & printing paper and the coated paper grade are showing
signs of firming up due to cost push from the pulp price.
Across sectors, we
are seeing Indian companies going abroad to acquire companies and
assets. Barring a few cases, the theme of global play is missing in
the ambitions of paper companies...
The growth rate that
the Indian industry is offering is robust enough. Even with all the
announced capacity expansion, India would still have a supply gap in
2010, so going overseas for creating paper capacities seems unlikely
but for pulp and raw material, that’s the way forward and many
people are considering. For individual companies, certainly one
route to grow would be acquiring capacities where the plantation
aspect is taken care of.
What are the
regions where Indian companies are looking for pulp and wood supply?
South-East Asia and
Latin America are the traditional regions. But I expect the African
continent to start contributing as they are like new kids on the
block as far as fibre supply is concerned and there are no
large-scale paper mills in that side of the world. It could be
developed like Russia, which doesn’t have huge capacities for pulp
and paper but supplies wood to other countries that have such large
plants. But we would need to factor in freight costs and we might
look at the idea of bulk buying at the industry level to bring down
costs.