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Plastics
News - December 7, 1998
CPI
Building Globally With Wood Substitute
MISSISSAUGA, ONTARIO - CPI Plastics Group Ltd. is poised
for growth in the world market, according to President Peter Clark.
The company, 36th in Plastics News' June ranking of North American
pipe, profile and tubing extruders, with annual related sales
of US$67 million, started as Crila Plastics Inc. in 1972, producing
aftermarket products for the automotive industry.
Clark acquired the company in 1989, and CPI since has carved a
niche for itself by producing decorative extrusions for the appliance
and furniture industries and engineering thermoplastic substitutions
for other materials, such as aluminum, chrome, and wood.
Especially wood.
Six months ago, CPI opened a 50,000-square-foot plant to produce
its newest product, Extrudawood - a polystyrene foam-based substitute
for wood. It licensed that technology from English inventor Geoff
House of Merstone on the Isle of Wight, England.
Taking House's technology further by creating new formulations,
CPI is engineering extrusions to imitate the look of finished
oak, mahogany, birch and even teak, as well as painted wood surfaces,
all at a fraction of the cost of the real thing, according to
Robert Ferguson, manager of the Extrudawood plant.
Since July, Ferguson estimates sales of Extrudawood at between
$4 million and $5 million. He said he expects that amount to more
than double in 1999.
Produced on 15 Davis-Standard extruding lines, Ferguson expects
Extrudawood will go beyond the construction and home-improvement
markets to be used as a viable replacement for wood "wherever
wood is being used, except as a structural product" he said.
Primarily, Extrudawood has not been tested for use in structural
applications, such as floor joists. Beyond that, in North America
even Extrudawood is not a cost-effective replacement for the grade
of wood used for those applications, he said.
On the other hand, Ferguson said, Extrudawood could be a viable
replacement for structural wood in hot, tropical climates because
it resists damage from moisture and termites.
Already Ferguson said there is a significant market for the product
in China, where "there is a tremendous use of hardwood floors,"
but where damage from the elements and from infestation can ruin
wood.
To take Extrudawood global, CPI is offering licensing agreements
to U.S. and European countries, including France, where CPI is
in negotiations with an undisclosed large company.
Clark said CPI also plans to continue a "very aggressive" acquisition
campaign.
"We feel that in the ‘90s, to remain competitive in the global
marketplace, you have to be part of a larger whole," he said.
"We've decided that we will be an acquirer rather than acquired."
In the meantime, CPI is closing its 40,000-square-foot Bolton,
Ontario, plant and moving its operations to a 95,000-square-foot
plant being leased near its Mississauga headquarters and the company's
three other plants.
Plans include centralizing CPI's tooling shops, now located in
each plant, in the new building.
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