• Latest
  • Trending
  • All

Japan’s Daikin targets India as air-con and heat-pump manufacturing hub

March 26, 2023

Nations split on how to cut plastic pollution after week of UN talks

June 3, 2023

Why Britain’s households should expect energy bills to remain high

June 3, 2023

Biodiversity rises up business risk agenda as species decline worsens

June 3, 2023

Once scrappy English town in running to be green energy powerhouse

June 3, 2023

Carbon counter: rooftop solar’s virtue is its main reward in cloudy UK

June 3, 2023

EU regulators flag rising greenwashing practices by banks

June 2, 2023

Saudi Arabia’s ‘prickly prince’ of oil bristles as crude price slides

June 2, 2023

EU relaxes antitrust guidelines on green initiatives

June 2, 2023

Brussels woos banks to provide guarantees for gas stored in Ukraine

June 2, 2023

A new way for investors to help light up Africa

June 2, 2023

Groups to boost entrepreneurs in clean energy

June 2, 2023

Saudi Arabia expands lithium processing to supply BMW

June 2, 2023
Markets by TradingView
Energy Trends
  • Home
  • News
  • Policy
  • Renewable
  • Companies
  • Markets
  • Tech
  • More
    • Climate
    • Infrastructure
No Result
View All Result
Energy Trends
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Policy
  • Companies
  • Markets
  • Tech
  • Climate
  • Infrastructure
  • Renewable
Home Companies

Japan’s Daikin targets India as air-con and heat-pump manufacturing hub

March 26, 2023
in Companies
245 8
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Japan’s Daikin Industries aims to make India its biggest manufacturing hub for exports, as the world’s largest air-conditioning company targets a near tripling of Made in India products sent abroad by 2025.

In an interview with the Financial Times, chief executive Masanori Togawa said European efforts to reduce dependence on Russian energy and tougher environmental regulations have presented the group with “the biggest opportunity” to expand sales of energy-efficient heating products such as heat pumps and has prompted the company to consider producing them in India.

“We are actively ramping up production of heat pumps, but if Europe enforces tighter regulations to require them at full scale by 2030, we still won’t be able to meet enough demand with our production in the region,” Togawa said at the company’s headquarters in Osaka.

“India would turn into a market as giant as China in the future, as the middle class and the wealthy are growing tremendously. In addition to concentrating production of [mass-market air-conditioning] products in India, we will also consider making heat pumps in the country that are exported abroad,” he said.

The company has one of the largest market shares in the European heat pump market along with Japan’s Panasonic and had already planned to quadruple its heat pump manufacturing capacity in Europe by 2025. To help reach the target, it will set up a dedicated plant in Poland and increase production at existing facilities in Germany, Belgium and the Czech Republic.

In India, Daikin is constructing a new plant which will begin operation in August, making room air conditioners and compressors, a key component. It is doubling down on a market where only 5 per cent of homes have air conditioning. The company will also aim to export Made in India air-con products to 100 markets in 2025, up from 30 in 2021.

Pursuing an aggressive acquisition strategy, the Osaka-based manufacturer has expanded rapidly outside its shrinking home market to become the world’s top manufacturer of air-conditioning equipment by sales. In 2006, it acquired Malaysian rival OYL for ¥232bn ($1.7bn) and further expanded in the US with the $3.7bn acquisition of Goodman Global in 2012.

With the rise in global energy prices boosting sales of its energy-efficient air conditioners in Europe, the US and Asia, the company has forecast a record operating profit for the second straight year, with profit expected to rise 18 per cent to ¥372bn in its year to March.

Even so, the Japanese group has also been hit by chip shortages and has had to adjust to supply chain disruptions following Covid-19 lockdowns in China. In March 2021, Daikin began producing air-filtering equipment also at a factory in Japan that was previously made only in China.

The company has begun designing its own customised semiconductors, in an attempt to reduce its reliance on multipurpose ones that are becoming difficult to obtain.

“Being dependent on one company or one region [to procure components and manufacture products] would be very difficult if an issue occurred there. During the pandemic, we have built a back-up system to procure and develop substitutes,” Togawa said.

Related Articles

Companies

Why Britain’s households should expect energy bills to remain high

June 3, 2023
Companies

Once scrappy English town in running to be green energy powerhouse

June 3, 2023
Companies

Carbon counter: rooftop solar’s virtue is its main reward in cloudy UK

June 3, 2023
Companies

Saudi Arabia’s ‘prickly prince’ of oil bristles as crude price slides

June 2, 2023
Companies

Brussels woos banks to provide guarantees for gas stored in Ukraine

June 2, 2023
Companies

A new way for investors to help light up Africa

June 2, 2023
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Scale Microgrid Solutions steps into community solar development

March 15, 2023

ComEd offers $120M for equity in Chicago electricity deal

March 14, 2023

Robotics company advances autonomous solar farm construction tech

March 14, 2023

EU wants manufacturing capacity for clean tech to meet 40% of local need

0

Germany and Italy stall EU ban on combustion engines

0

Climate graphic of the week: Glacial lakes flood risks rise

0

Nations split on how to cut plastic pollution after week of UN talks

June 3, 2023

Why Britain’s households should expect energy bills to remain high

June 3, 2023

Biodiversity rises up business risk agenda as species decline worsens

June 3, 2023

Latest News

Nations split on how to cut plastic pollution after week of UN talks

June 3, 2023

Biodiversity rises up business risk agenda as species decline worsens

June 3, 2023

EU regulators flag rising greenwashing practices by banks

June 2, 2023

EU relaxes antitrust guidelines on green initiatives

June 2, 2023

Groups to boost entrepreneurs in clean energy

June 2, 2023

Saudi Arabia expands lithium processing to supply BMW

June 2, 2023
Energy Trends

Copyright © 2022 Energy Trends. All rights Reserved.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact
  • Advertise

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Policy
  • Companies
  • Markets
  • Tech
  • Climate
  • Infrastructure
  • Renewable

Copyright © 2022 Energy Trends. All rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In