CHENNAI, FEB 7: Tamilnadu Petroproduts Ltd (TPL) has shown a slight increase in sales for the third quarter ended December 1998 to Rs 87.87 crore (Rs 84.87 crore), but a healthy jump in its bottomline. For the quarter ended December 1998, the net profit was Rs 10.70 crore (Rs 5.81 crore), up 84.2 per cent. The gross profit is Rs 27.06 crore (Rs 20.06 crore). No provision was made for taxation this time, while Rs 84 lakh has been shown for the previous corresponding quarter.The company still faces serious problems on sales of one of its major products epichlorohydrin. While sales of Linear Alkyl Benzyne have eased the company's pressures this quarter, and will probably help it in the next, Tamilnadu Petroproducts is working on a 20 per cent capacity production of epichlorohydrin. According to company sources, the heavy dependence on LAB (which is prone to international fluctuations in price on account of the availability of key raw material N-Paraffin) was not an ideal situation, though the supply-demandcycle at this juncture was proving favourable.
The company had embarked on the epichlorohydrin project in 1995 at a time when the epoxy resin industry was growing at 15 per cent and the raw material epichlorohydrin was very much in demand.
With TPL being the sole manufacturer of epichlorohydrin, it was envisaged that the product would skyrocket the company's bottomline. The reality is that the company is still unable to break even on the product.
Despite requesting for a safeguard duty to prevent dumping of epichlorohydrin in the country eight months back, there has been little initiative in this direction. However it is expected that the joint venture project with Ciba-Geigy Petro Araldite Pvt Ltd to manufacture resins will ensure offtake of epichlorohydrin. This is likely to materialise in the next financial year. According to company sources, if Petro Araldite was not there as an option, there would have been little future for epichlorohydrin.
While Korea is the major culprit for dumpingepichlorohydrin at $ 1050 per container c&f, Japan was also responsible in part, officials said. ``At this price, we cannot meet our variable costs,'' they said.
Large resin industries like Cibatul were able to source epichlorohydrin -- purchased at $ 995 from Dow Chemicals.
Copyright © 1999 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.