New name, new logo, same old drive and values – Garware Technical Fibres

New name, new logo, same old drive and values – Garware Technical Fibres

RN BhaskarUpdated: Wednesday, May 29, 2019, 07:01 AM IST
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Newly-rebranded Garware Technical Fibres, former Garware Wall Ropes that was established in 1976, has come a long way. The company takes pride in the manner in which it was set up by Padmashree Abasaheb Garware, grandfather of the present chairman and managing director Vayu Garware. 

“He (Padmashree Abasaheb Garware)set up this company to cater to local needs. He was the first in India to introduce Nylon, Polyethylene. Supplies from importers were not reliable, so he thought a domestic manufacturing capability of high specialty technical textile fibres would be a good idea,” explains Vayu, the third in the line of succession at this company.

“Ramesh Garware, who passed away in 2013, expanded our product offerings to international markets especially the tough and demanding markets of Europe, North America. He led R&D teams and manufacturing towards forward integration delivering value-added solutions.”

Today, Garware Technical Fibres is a composite technical textile company beyond ropes and cordage providing solutions in more than 75 countries around the world. It has a range of products and solutions of over 20,000 varieties. All its products are made in state-of-art manufacturing facilities rated as one of the top 25 per cent of global lean practices. It provides employment to around 6,500 people directly and indirectly of which over 1,600 are women. More importantly, it is ranked at #34 among the ‘Best places to work’ in India in the mid-sized category.

Vayu agreed to an exclusive discussion with RN Bhaskar of FPJ. Given below are edited excerpts:

It is difficult to give an answer to such a question because of the vast range of products and services we offer.  In fact, I do not think there is any one company that offers such a vast range in the areas that we cater to.

Broadly speaking, we cater to four segments.

We are first and foremost in the food sector.  We cater to aquaculture and to fisheries.  Some of the best and scientifically designed fishing nets come from our company. They are designed to meet specific objectives— to ensure that only big fish is caught, leaving small fish to float away.  We make nets that can carry huge tonnages.  And each kind of fishing application has a different type of fibre and netting design. We design nets for fish farms.  Once again, depending on the fish that you wish to grow, we design a net for that purpose.

The same thing goes for polyhouses for farming, where we provide the netting to withstand sunlight throughout the day and keep insects out.  Once again, depending on the application and the terrain, we actually design a different product.

The second segment we look at is sports— this is where we make nets for games— be it for Wimbledon’s tennis matches, or the badminton nets back home.  We are strong players in this market.

The third would be infrastructure— what we prefer to call geo-synthetics. Geo-synthetics are technical textiles used in infrastructure construction to replace traditional methods and improve life, efficacy and cost. The estimated spend in the infrastructure development is USD 85 billion in India. Garware geo-solutions are used across India in landfill construction, coastal and flood protection, seawall embankments, rockfall protection and other solutions.

And the fourth would be solutions for defence services. This is a big market and could grow enormously in the coming years. This is because technical textiles related to the defence market is around Rs 1,700 crore. Our efforts is to blend with the government’s ‘Make in India’ objective as a majority of such products are currently imported. To grow well in this market, we have entered into technical collaborations with various defense research organisations including Israel’s AERO-T for aerostat balloons.

It is from fishing that we generate maximum revenues. We derive 65 per cent of our business from this area— from nets for a variety of fishing and aqua-farming applications.  Given the looming population growth and food shortages, we see this segment growing more rapidly than most other sectors in the food industry.

Fishing and Aquaculture would also be the most profitable segment. Our margins are between 20-30 per cent in this field because of our design and the respect our customers have for our products.  We enjoy a brand premium of 30-40 per cent.

Educating people on why new generation fibres and designs are important. It took us almost eight-nine years to persuade the Indian consumer to migrate from nylon to polyethylene.

Since we are into many products, we are fairly well dispersed.  But when it comes to fishing, Tamil Nadu is one of our biggest markets. In fact, it is because we are into designer products, we do not have a single one-time big-bang approach to capital expansion. We are consistent in the way we grow.  We have a capital outlay of around Rs 40 crore a year.  Like a textile mill which adds more looms when business grows, we add specialised looms and equipment when there is a need for a new product.

Our core investment is in people, in our research teams and our ability to create new products that the markets want.

Our current growth rate of 20 per cent compound annual growth rate (CAGR) will remain constant for some more time. Yes, as new technologies come in, new products will emerge and growth rates may vary.  But we think we will stay at around 20 per cent CAGR for a few more years.

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