Arofine Polymers at PrintPack India 2022 Hall 3, Stand B20B

Showcasing water-based pasting adhesives, lamination, emulsions and coatings

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Arofine Polymers
arofine adhesives

Pune-based Arofine Polymers, an eco-friendly industrial adhesives company, will showcase a variety of innovative products at Printpack India 2022. Arofine Polymers is creating relationships across industries, controlling breakthroughs, and revolutionizing product production with over 9 brands, exporting to 5 countries, and a large client base. It has factories in Bhosari and Chakan. In Chakan, the company has a fully automated plant with 20 reactors capable of producing 10,000 MT of bonds and adhesives.

In PrintPack India 2022, the company showcases its water-based pasting adhesives, lamination, emulsion, and coatings in hall 3, stand B20B.

 

PrintPack Show Daily

“We attend this event mainly from getting to interact with existing customers and potential customers. The interactions allow us to plan our new product development accordingly. We are now expecting requirements specifically regarding eco-friendly packaging such as paper bags, paper straws and paper cups,” said Chaitanya Joshi of Arofine Polymers.

The company expects an audience to visit their stand, mainly printing firm owners, purchase heads, and consultants.

Note: The IPPGroup will be publishing the PrintPack India Show Daily on all five days of the event from 26 to 30 May 2022. Our May issues of Indian Printer and Publisher and Packaging South Asia will also contain previews of the event. 

2023 promises an interesting ride for print in India

Indian Printer and Publisher founded in 1979 is the oldest B2B trade publication in the multi-platform and multi-channel IPPGroup. While the print and packaging industries have been resilient in the past 33 months since the pandemic lockdown of 25 March 2020, the commercial printing and newspaper industries have yet to recover their pre-Covid trajectory.

The fragmented commercial printing industry faces substantial challenges as does the newspaper industry. While digital short-run printing and the signage industry seem to be recovering a bit faster, ultimately their growth will also be moderated by the progress of the overall economy. On the other hand book printing exports are doing well but they too face several supply-chain and logistics challenges.

The price of publication papers including newsprint has been high in the past year while availability is diminished by several mills shutting down their publication paper and newsprint machines in the past four years. Indian paper mills are also exporting many types of paper and have raised prices for Indian printers. To some extent, this has helped in the recovery of the digital printing industry with its on-demand short-run and low-wastage paradigm.

Ultimately digital print and other digital channels will help print grow in a country where we are still far behind in our paper and print consumption and where digital is a leapfrog technology that will only increase the demand for print in the foreseeable future. For instance, there is no alternative to a rise in textbook consumption but this segment will only reach normality in the next financial year beginning on 1 April 2023.

Thus while the new normal is a moving target and many commercial printers look to diversification, we believe that our target audiences may shift and change. Like them, we will also have to adapt with agility to keep up with their business and technical information needs.

Our 2023 media kit is ready, and it is the right time to take stock and reconnect with your potential markets and customers. Print is the glue for the growth of liberal education, new industry, and an emerging economy. We seek your participation in what promises to be an interesting ride.

– Naresh Khanna

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