LONDON - According to the latest information from IRL in its new Profile of the Chinese Paint Industry, 5th Edition, China has a 6.4 million tonne paint market. With paint production slightly ahead of this figure and imports and exports negligible in comparison, China is increasingly self-sufficient in paints and coatings, with the exception of high-tech and specialized types, which China is not yet equipped to produce.
 
The national market is expected to recover from the economic wobble it experienced in late 2008 with the help of government-sponsored economic stimulus plans. A noticeable dip in demand from export markets, prompting the output of Chinese goods to plunge, has elicited a wave of economic stimulus plans from the Chinese central government. Emphasis is in the continued development of rural markets, both in terms of stoking rural consumer expenditure, building better roads to rural communities and targeting rural citizens with small, eco-friendly cars.
 
The structure of the Chinese coatings market is still highly focused on infrastructural and manufacturing applications, so industrial coatings continue to represent the majority (70 percent) of the market.
 
The architectural coatings market in China accounts for 30 percent of all national coatings demand (1.92 million tonnes), making it the largest single segment of the market, but still in the minority compared to the whole industrial finishing sector. These facts are unlikely to change by 2013, when the architectural paint market is forecast to reach 2.6 million tonnes, its nearest challenger being the protective coatings segment which will reach nearly 2.3 million tonnes by then. Environmental influences exert a strong pull on the architectural coatings market, either through areas such as formaldehyde reduction (or destruction), other aspects of VOC reduction or in terms of heat insulation.
 
Short-term construction trends continue to favor massive events such as the Shanghai Expo and the Asian Olympic Games, which will be in Guangzhou. Other long‐term spending plans hold good for Beijing, where construction and upgrading projects continue apace, and in Sichuan Province, where there will be reconstruction projects following the earthquake of 2008.
 
The single fastest-growing product segment will almost certainly be automotive refinishes. This is the result of Chinese vehicle ownership reaching more than 64 million in 2008, which has created enormous demand for the services of garages and repair centers. Recent developments in China have seen refinish producers bringing quick-curing products to the market, which reflects China’s ongoing demand for high technology. In addition, water-based coatings at the OEM stage are also likely to continue gathering ground, as a result of new, eco-efficient car designs that are being targeted at budding car owners. Also on the road itself, China will have close to five billion kilometers of road by 2020, as a result of major infrastructure projects and the development of major roads and expressways. This will result in enormous demand for road-marking paints throughout the next decade.
 
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