Insulation industry news from Global Insulation
New Zealand: Fletcher Building has appointed Tony Dragicevich as a non-executive director and member of its board of directors, effective from 1 August 2024. Dragicevich previously served as managing director and CEO of aluminium producer Capral, and has held leadership positions at Wattyl Group, GWA Bathrooms and Kitchens, Red Paper Group and Carter Holt Harvey Insulation. He holds a commerce degree from the University of Auckland.
Acting chair Barbara Chapman said "Tony is a highly accomplished CEO and director who brings significant experience in leading distribution and manufacturing businesses across Australia and New Zealand. His successful career in the building products sector, combined with his strong track record of delivering value for shareholders, make him an excellent addition to Fletcher Building's Board."
Australian insulation reseller optimistic that mineral wool insulation shortage is ending
08 June 2017Australia: Pricewise Insulation says that it is hopeful that a shortage of pink batts mineral wool insulation products will be resolved following the end of a strike at Fletcher Insulation in late May 2017. Workers at the insulation producer started industrial action in mid-February 2017. Pricewise, an insulation distributor noticed falling stock levels of the product during the strike.
Fletcher Materials shores up insulation business
22 February 2017New Zealand: Fletcher Materials has said that it has been able to strengthen its insulation business in both New Zealand and Australia due to improvements in service and relative cost position in the six months to 31 December 2016, following site closures at its Fletcher Insulation business. Overall, operating earnings before significant items for its Building Materials lines, including plasterboard and insulation products, rose by 10% year-on-year to US$38m from US$34.4m.
Fletcher Building looks at big asset sale
20 November 2015Australia: Fletcher Building is considering selling its insulation business, which could see the manufacturer of Pink Batts get a new owner. The company said that further asset sales were on the cards, although it did not specify insulation.
"Fletcher Building is undertaking an ongoing review of its business portfolio with a focus on lifting operational and financial performance and pursuing organic growth. The review process invariably leads to speculation on a range of possible outcomes. The company is aware of its continuous disclosure obligations and will promptly communicate to the market if or when there are substantive matters required to be disclosed," said a statement from Fletcher Building.
Fletcher holds its insulation assets, Tasman Insulation and Fletcher Insulation, in its light building products division. Fletcher Building has a market capitalisation of US$3.45bn and it is Australasia's biggest supplier of building and construction materials. These include laminates, cement, pipes and roofing. It has just won the New Zealand International Convention Centre contract in Auckland, as well as the contract to build Precinct Properties' US$396m, 38-level Downtown Tower at the foot of Queen St on the waterfront.
Fletcher Building's Chief Executive Mark Adamson made it clear at the 2015 annual meeting that he had not bought any new assets since starting in the job, but had instead been dealing with the difficult legacy of selling businesses that were either underperforming or not up to expectations. "In my time in the job, we have not made one single acquisition," said Adamson. "I have had to deal with what we have today. Profitability is improving, maybe not as fast as anyone would like."
Fletcher Building ups earnings through trebling house builds
21 October 2014
New Zealand: Fletcher Building has forecast an upturn in earnings as it moves to triple the pace of home building in New Zealand and is involved in a pilot social housing project with the government in Christchurch. The company told shareholders at its annual general meeting that full-year operating earnings in the 2015 financial year could rise by as much as 11% to US$650-690m, compared to US$624m in the 2014 financial year.
Fletcher to close its Christchurch insulation plant
16 October 2014New Zealand: Fletcher Building will close its Christchurch insulation plant, as it consolidates its Tasman Insulations operations in a ‘highly competitive market.’ The proposal would see 29 Christchurch factory workers lose their jobs manufacturing Pink Batts insulation, while its Auckland factory will become a round-the-clock operation. Current Christchurch-based customer service, sales and warehousing roles will be unaffected, with two new jobs created, while nine further positions at the Auckland plant will be offered.
"Consolidation is in the best interest of our people and our customers," said Tim Richards, chief executive of building products. "We are operating in a highly competitive market, impacted by an increase in volume of imported product and a general reduction in demand for insulation following changes to EECA's home insulation programme in 2013."
Tasman Insulation appeals Batt trademark ruling
12 June 2014Australia: Fletcher Building's subsidiary Tasman Insulation, which makes Pink Batts insulation, is appealing against a High Court decision that a rival using the word 'batts' was not in breach of trademarks.
The High Court in Auckland in May 2014 handed down a multi-pronged decision on a long-running dispute between Tasman Insulation and Knauf Insulation, which makes the rival Earthwool products. Justice Brendan Brown ruled that Tasman's claim largely succeeded. However, claims that Tasman's trademarks were infringed by Knauf using the word 'batt' and 'batts' in packaging were not upheld.
The Court of Appeal has confirmed that Tasman has lodged an appeal against the ruling and a hearing date has yet to be set. The dispute canvassed a range of claims, including false advertising and intellectual property breaches. The case has run since 2011.
New Zealand: German building materials company Knauf has failed to get Fletcher Building's use of the 'Batts' trademark for building insulation thrown out on the grounds that it is a common name in general public use.
Justice Brendan Brown refused a request to revoke the trademark and said that the use of the word in the installation instructions on packaging didn't infringe trademark. "There is clearly a not insignificant degree of use of the words 'batt' and 'batts' to describe insulation in a generic, non-proprietary sense," Justice Brown said. "However, collectively this evidence is not of a quantity or a quality to cause me to be satisfied that the trademark has become a common name in general public use for pieces of fibrous insulation."
Knauf exported some of its Earthwool insulation to New Zealand in 2011, with packaging displaying the words 'batt' and 'batts' in the installation instructions, with sparked the litigation. Fletcher protested the use of its trademark word 'Batts' and Knauf subsequently claimed that the word had become generic to describe insulation.
The High Court case shows intense rivalry between the companies in New Zealand, where an estimated 15Mm2 of insulation products are sold every year, most of it made from glass. Fletcher's subsidiary Tasman Insulation makes more than 7Mm2 of insulation from recycled glass a year, sold under the Pink Batts brand.
Fletcher is facing increasing competition from Knauf, which has about US$1.9bn in annual insulation sales worldwide compared to Fletcher's US$1.3bn of total building product sales, which also includes plasterboard, aluminium doors and windows and roofing. In February 2014 Fletcher said that the local insulation market remained competitive as price declines offset volume gains.
Australia: An insulation industry representative was told 'not to rock the boat' when he warned government planners about safety risks in the Home Insulation Program. The comments have arisen in a royal commission into the Home Insulation Program that is investigating whether the deaths of four installers could have been avoided.
Peter Ruz, who worked for Fletcher Insulation and who was the director of the Insulation Council of Australia and New Zealand, raised safety issues with installing foil insulation when he was consulted about the scheme in 2009. According to Australian Broadcasting Corporation transcripts from the commission, Ruz said he told government planners that three installers in New Zealand had been electrocuted and that he recommended the use of other insulation materials. However, Ruz felt that planners at the meeting dismissed his comments as 'squabbling' between different insulation type producers. Ruz also alleges that he sent an Environment Department manager, Beth Brunoro, news cuttings of the deaths in New Zealand.
Brunoro previously told the inquiry earlier that concerns would have been taken into consideration when the guidelines were being created for the scheme. It is unclear exactly what happened with that information because Brunoro stopped overseeing the project in April 2009 and the insulation scheme started in full in July 2009.
rThe Home Insulation Program ran until February 2010. The royal commission, overseen by Richard Hanger, will submit its report by 30 June 2014.