Rohm And Haas Begins Operations In Mexico

Philadelphia-based Rohm and Haas Co., a supplier of solutions for the specialty materials industry,
has commenced production of emulsion polymers and polyacrylates at its new high-technology plant in
Querétaro, Mexico.

Rohm and Haas will produce products for the building and construction, industrial, adhesives
and household goods industries at the plant, which is the first in Latin America to operate under
the company’s 21st Century manufacturing principles. The company’s main objective in opening the
plant is to increase its presence in Mexico, the Andean Countries, Central America and the
Caribbean; and it expects growth between 10 and 15 percent in the Latin American region.

“With this action in Querétaro, we welcome this new production and distribution platform for
our products,” said Mauro Trevisani, Mexico country manager, Rohm and Haas. “This gives the best
attention to our customers in Mexico and Latin America. At the same time we will satisfy customer
needs more efficiently by transferring the production we had in Apizaco plant to Querétaro.”

July 1, 2008

Conwed Plastics Receives ISO Certification

Minneapolis-based Conwed Plastics Inc. — a global manufacturer of plastic netting for markets
including agricultural, building materials, consumer goods, erosion control, filtration,
industrial, packaging and turf protection — has received ISO 9001:2000 registration for the quality
management systems at its facilities in Minneapolis; Roanoke, Va.; and Athens, Ga. The ISO
9001:2000 standard, developed by the International Organization of Standardization, certifies
quality management systems related to the design and development, manufacturing, installation and
servicing of a company’s products.

“Our success in achieving this goal is due to the tremendous dedication and teamwork of
everyone in the company,” said Mark Lewry, CEO and president, Conwed Plastics. “ISO registration
supports our pursuit of continuous improvement and an ongoing commitment to provide our customers
with a superior value proposition including superior service and high-quality products.”

July 1, 2008

Bremen Cotton Exchange Announces New Officers

The 134th General Assembly of Germany-based Bremer Baumwollbörse, the Bremen Cotton Exchange, has
elected the following officers:

Wolfgang Vogt-Jordan, Albrecht, Müller-Pearse & Co., president; and Jens Lukaczik, Cargo
Control Germany GmbH, vice president. According to the by-laws of the Bremen Cotton Exchange, the
honorary chair is elected for a maximum of two years. Jan B. Wellmann remains executive director of
the exchange.

July 1, 2008

Celanese Announces Price Increase

Effective August 1, or as contracts allow, Celanese Corp., Dallas, will implement a price increase
of $330 per ton on all polyvinyl alchohol grades in the United States. The increase affects all
applications in all regions. 

July 1, 2008

The Rupp Report: China Looks For More Sustainability

Over the past few years, as China has become one of the biggest consumers of energy and a
powerhouse of production, it has increased its ability to damage the environment very badly.
However, the Chinese government is taking action to protect the environment and to encourage its
industries to produce in a more sustainable way. Already with the government’s recent Five-Year
Plan, the Chinese textile industry is forced to generate 70-percent less wastewater in its
finishing plants than in the previous period. Some plants already have been shut down for not
achieving the mandated results.

Environmental Labeling

Now there is a new effort to further reduce environmental damage. According to information
from the Hong Kong Trade Development Council (HKTDC), environmental labeling in China has developed
into a complete system encompassing standards, certification, assessment and quality assurance.

Products

Environment-labeled products cover the automotive, building materials, textiles, electronics,
daily chemicals, furniture and packaging industries. Products of more than 30,000 specifications
produced by some 1,500 enterprises have now passed environmental labeling certification. Wu
Xiaoqing, vice minister of Environmental Protection, said China has made enormous progress in its
economic development, but its economic structure remains irrational, without any fundamental change
to the haphazard mode of economic growth.

Bottlenecks And Obstacles

Resource and energy consumption and the weakening of the ecological environment have created
bottlenecks and obstacles to sustainable economic and social development. In order to achieve
harmonized development of the environment and the economy, the government has made the building of
a resource-efficient and environmentally friendly society its goal and embarked on the road of
sustainable development by initiating changes to the existing mode of production and way of life.



Promotion For Sustainable Consumption


Chinese authorities are taking proactive steps to promote sustainable consumption by adopting
new government procurement procedures. Its policy for procuring energy-efficient products was
announced in 2004. In 2006, the government promulgated the Suggestions on the Implementation of
Government Procurement of Environment-Labeled Products and published procurement checklists,
requiring government departments to give priority to energy-efficient and environment-labeled
products in their procurement. The State Council decided to make the procurement of
energy-efficient products mandatory in a further bid to promote energy conservation and
environmental protection in 2007.



Green Procurement Scheme And Certification


On the sustainable consumption front, China launched the government green procurement scheme
in 2006. The Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Environmental Protection announced two green
procurement checklists covering 14 product categories from 444 enterprises. China’s environmental
labeling certification provides important technical support for the government’s green procurement
efforts. Up to now, 65 categories of products have been certified. China has signed agreements of
cooperation and mutual assistance in environmental labeling with countries and regions like South
Korea, Japan, Scandinavia, Germany, Thailand, Australia and New Zealand.

June 24, 2008

Zagis USA To Build Cotton Processing Facilities In Louisiana

Lacassine, La.-based Zagis USA – a newly formed enterprise between majority owner Grupo Zaga S.A.
de C.V., a Mexico-based conglomerate, and several North Carolina textile executives – has begun
construction on the first of two new textile mills it will operate in Louisiana to produce cotton
sales yarn.

In all, Zagis plans to invest $75 million in the two facilities – the first of which will be
located in a 200-acre industrial park in Jefferson Davis Parish in southwest Louisiana – and employ
160 workers. According to the Louisiana Economic Development Department (LED), the project is the
first substantial cotton-processing-related investment to be made in the state in many years.

“Zagis chose Louisiana because of its location relative to raw material, its infrastructure –
interstate, rail, ports – and the strong entrepreneurial support from Louisiana departments of
Economic Development and Agriculture,” said Dan Feibus, COO, Zagis USA.

LED notes that those advantages will enable the new company to have among the lowest
manufacturing costs both in the United States and worldwide. In addition, the company will export a
value-added product made from Louisiana-grown cotton.

“This represents a significant shift for the cotton industry, particularly here in
Louisiana,” said Stephen Moret, secretary, LED. “Historically most of Louisiana’s cotton has been
shipped out of state in raw, unprocessed form, headed for export markets. Once phase two is
complete, the Zagis mills could utilize up to 15 to 20 percent of Louisiana’s cotton crop to spin
cotton yarn right here at home.”

Phase one  of the Zagis project is expected to be completed by late fall 2008, and the
second phase is planned to begin in early 2009.

June 24, 2008

Hyosung Opens Creora® Plant In Vietnam, Liaison Office In India

South Korea-based Hyosung Corp., manufacturer of creora® spandex, has commissioned a new production
plant in Nhon Trach, Vietnam, as part of its strategy to expand its presence in Indian and other
Southeast Asian textile markets.

“We have invested $100 million to manufacture 15,000 tons of creora annually in the Vietnam
facility, as the next step in Hyosung’s global growth strategy and to better serve the Southeast
Asian markets,” said CH Lee, president, Hyosung. “This state-of-the-art facility is globally
competitive to ensure fast and reliable service in the region.”

The company also has opened a liaison office in New Delhi, India, to enhance customer service
in India. According to Hyosung, the spandex market in India, currently valued at some $60 million,
is growing by 5 to 10 percent annually.

June 24, 2008

Textile Manufacturers See Little Success In US/China Talks

Although US Secretary of the Treasury Henry M. Paulson, Jr. touted the success of last week’s
US/China Strategic Economic Dialogue (SED), textile and other manufacturers were less than excited
about it. At the conclusion of the talks at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., Paulson said, “
I am pleased that we continue to build stronger relationships between our leaders and our countries
and that this innovative effort to strengthen a unique economic relationship is a success.”

Paulson cited success in dealing with two specific initiatives — energy and environmental
cooperation. He pointed out that China and the United States are the two largest net importers of
oil, account for more than half of the world’s coal consumption and are the two largest emitters of
greenhouse gases. He announced that the two countries will sign a 10-year Energy and Environmental
Cooperation Framework. Paulson also said the two nations have agreed to launch negotiations on a
bilateral investment treaty that he said could lead to treating each other’s investors in a “fair
and transparent manner.”

Textile and other industry representatives in Washington expressed their disappointment that
the talks did not focus on international trade issues, and particularly, what they see as China’s
manipulation of its currency in order to gain advantages in international trade. The Alliance for
American Manufacturing (AAM), a partnership of labor and industry representatives, said the talks “
squandered an opportunity to make China trade more balanced and market driven.” AAM’s Executive
Director Scott Paul said the SED is built on a “flawed premise” that periodic discussions alone can
achieve progress on critical issues. He called for a “more robust” approach from Washington that
includes specific objectives, a mechanism for assessing progress, and incentives for making
progress and punitive measures for backsliding.

Prior to the opening of the talks, a bipartisan group of 11 senators sent a letter to
Secretary Paulson urging him to “push the Chinese government to stop manipulating its currency and
allow great appreciation of its renminbi (RMB).”

In part, the letter said: “The lack of significant progress on the continuously misaligned
RMB has substantial negative effects on American manufacturers. China’s long-standing policy of
undervaluing its currency —in violation of the International Monetary Fund commitments —
effectively gives an unfair competitive advantage of up to 40 percent to its frequently state-run
firms. The unfair price advantage that the under-valued RMB gives Chinese firms has forced many
American companies to declare bankruptcy or even to go out of business, harming our workers,
families and middle class.”

The senators said they believe US manufacturers can compete in a world economy, but that they
cannot compete when their competitors are supported by government policies that deliberately make
their exports artificially cheaper. The letter was signed by Democratic Sens. Barack Obama, Ill.;
Sherrod Brown, Ohio; Sander Levin, Mich.; Evan Bayh, Ind.; Debbie Stabenow, Mich.; Charles Schumer,
N.Y.; and Sheldon Whitehouse, R.I.; and Republican Sens. Elizabeth Dole, N.C.; Jim Bunning, Ky.;
Olympia Snow, Maine; and Kent Conrad, Mont.

Secretary Paulson said China has been making some progress toward increasing the pace of its
currency appreciation, but he urged the Chinese to continue its move toward currency flexibility.



June 24, 2008

Mayer Elected Chairman Of VDMA Textile Machinery Association

Frankfurt-based German Engineering Federation (VDMA) Textile Machinery Association — has named
Fritz P. Mayer, managing partner, Karl Mayer Textilmaschinenfabrik GmbH, chairman, to succeed
Johann Philipp Dilo, who served as chairman from 2005 until the present.

Dilp proposed that Mayer was a good candidate for chairman, because of his long-term
experience not only at the top of a medium-sized company but also in the Chinese market. Mayer has
been in a management position at Germany-based Karl Mayer — a manufacturer of warp-knitting and
Raschel machines — since 1980.

The board of directors also appointed Heinrich Trützschler, managing partner, Trützschler
GmbH & Co. KG, and Karlheinz Liebrandt, co-owner, Liba Maschinenfabrik GmbH, as vice-chairman.

June 24, 2008

Valley Forge Fabrics Receives Best Practice Award From Sustainable Florida

Fort Lauderdale, Fla.-based Valley Forge Fabrics Inc., a supplier of decorative textiles for
hospitality applications, has received the Best Practice award in the Large Company Category from
Sustainable Florida, a consortium of business, civic and government leaders and organizations
dedicated to the furtherance of sustainable economic, environmental and social objectives. Award
winners in seven categories were chosen by a jury of nine individuals involved in the
sustainability movement.

Valley Forge Fabrics recently introduced its FRESH — Fabrics Redefining Environmental
Standards (for) Hospitality — line of fabrics made from recycled polyethylene terephthalate plastic
bottles, and claims it is the only textile company that has an established reclamation process to
expedite textile recycling.

June 24, 2008

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