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Is a Glass Shortage Coming?
Could a glass shortage really be on the way? Rumors of such have been growing
for months, and now conclusions are beginning to be drawn at factors that
could have led to a shortage.
"It's pretty obvious," says Mauro DiFazio, vice president of
float glass sales for Zeledyne in Tulsa, Okla. "Asahi Glass Co. has
taken three tanks out of the industry. There was a huge surplus of clear.
There is not anymore. My understanding is
that the clear market
is sold out."
Beginning in April, AGC Flat Glass North America's (AFGNA) parent company,
Japan-based Asahi, closed the doors of float glass facilities in Victorville,
Calif., and St. Augustine, Quebec, and one production line at its Greenland,
Tenn., manufacturing plant (CLICK
HERE for related story). According to the press release issued by
the company, the move was expected to reduce Asahi's glass production
capacity in North America by approximately 40 percent.
"The downturn in the residential market resulted in a significant
overcapacity situation," says John Hughes, commercial segment manager
for AFGNA. "This supply/demand situation resulted in AGC temporarily
reducing its capacity."
Hughes adds, "AGC will be bringing up the lines once demand warrants
it."
While the move may have helped Asahi's bottom line, others worry about
what might happen should residential market begin to pick up while commercial
holds steady, increasing demand for this product.
"With the downturn of [AGC] and shutting down of three of their float
lines we're now running at about 98 percent of capacity as an industry,"
says Russell Ebeid, president of Guardian Industries Corp.'s Glass Group
in Auburn Hills, Mich. "So any little blip is going to affect supply
of glass to the trade."
One such blip occurred recently, when torrential rains left parts of Wichita
Falls, Texas, under as much as 15 inches of water-and left Pittsburgh-based
PPG Industries minus one float glass line. (CLICK
HERE for related story.) The disruption came shortly after the company
began making scheduled repairs to its line in Carlisle, Pa.
PPG clearly is not alone in its need for repairing the long-running lines
as continuous upgrades must be made to furnaces around the world. For
companies such as PPG where, Vicki Holt, senior vice president of glass
and fiberglass, points out, "the residential segment is actually
the largest user of glass, in terms of tonnage," now may be just
the time to repair lines when less demand is being heard from the residential
sector.
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