Search Results for: japan
10 results out of 2075 results found for 'japan'.
EMERGING MARKETS WITNESSING CREATIVITY IN DRINKS PACKAGING DEVELOPMENT
BY WANG FANGQING, RAGHAVENDRA VERMA, BILL CORCORAN, PACIFICA GODDARD, KEITH NUTHALL
DRINKS packaging can be quite different in emerging and developing markets than in the rich world. One issue simply is scale. Poorer consumers are often, simply, more interested in smaller sized portions than richer.…
SOUTHEAST ASIA COSMETICS SECTOR STILL DEVELOPING, DESPITE THE RECESSION
BY KARRYN MILLER, AHMAD PATHONI, MARK ROWE
SOUTHEAST Asia is a growing and diverse market for international personal care product brands, despite the challenges (and some losses) cased by the recession. The region contains relatively rich emerging markets (and the very rich city state of Singapore), and its major poorer countries, notably Vietnam and Indonesia are growing fast and emerging robustly from the recession.…
KIRIN TO START MANUFACTURING IN GERMANY
BY WANG FANGQING
JAPAN brewer Kirin Holdings will begin manufacturing and selling beer in Germany in October. Working with Bayerische Staatsbrauerei Weihenstephan, of Freising, Kirin hopes to lower logistics costs and improve quality for supplies to 23 countries in mainland Europe, including Germany, France and Italy.…
MATURE MARKETS PROTECT CLOTHING AND TEXTILE CONSUMERS AGAINST HARM FROM INDUSTRY PRODUCTS
BY ALAN OSBORN, KARRYN MILLER, GAVIN BLAIR, KEITH NUTHALL
WEARING clothes is not the most dangerous of pastimes: it is not really up there with hang-gliding, off-piste skiing and single-handed ocean yachting. But there are risks associated with wearing clothes, from the contact consumers and workers’ skin has with the chemicals used in production; to potential for strangulation by drawstrings, choking on toggles, and the flammability of some artificial fibres.…
INNOVATIVE PACKAGING TRANSFORMING GLOBAL DRINKS PACKAGING INDUSTRY
BY MARK ROWE
INNOVATIVE packaging is transforming the drinks industry. Heavy tins and bottles are being replaced by lighter composite and biodegradeable materials; hi-tech cartons are being manufactured that tell consumers if the milk’s gone off; and RFID (radio frequency identification) tags are being embedded with temperature sensors.…
TURKEY SEES ASIA-PACIFIC AS COATINGS EXPORT GROWTH MARKET
BY PAUL COCHRANE
THE US DOLLAR USD$2 billion Turkish paint sector is the sixth largest in Europe, yet when it comes to its coatings trade with the Asia-Pacific region, Turkey imports a lot more than it exports. Turkey has had fluctuating business with the Asia Pacific region – defined as China, South Korea, Japan, the Indian subcontinent, South-East Asia, Mongolia, Australasia, the Marshall Islands, Vanuatu, and the Cook Islands.…
ENERGY REFLECTING PAINTS AND COATINGS - A GROWING GREEN BUSINESS
BY KARRYN MILLER, ANCA GURZU, MARK ROWE and PAUL COCHRANE
THE NEED to think out of the box to reduce carbon emissions and pollution is becoming increasingly appreciated in the Asia-Pacific region. And the coatings sector offers a range of solutions to reduce energy use.…
ZEROSTYLE MINT PROVES POPULAR AS SMOKELESS TOBACCO ALTERNATIVE IN JAPAN
BY GAVIN BLAIR
IN May, Japan Tobacco (JT), which dominates the Japanese domestic market, launched a revolutionary new smokeless product, the Zerostyle Mint, in Tokyo. Sales have far exceeded expectations and production is now being ramped up to meet demand.
The Zerostyle Mint looks somewhat like a cigarette holder, with a black body and a tapered mouthpiece with a removable cap.…
JAPAN SEES DECLINE IN DEMAND FOR GLOBAL LUXURY BRANDS
BY KELLY WETHERILLE
FOR years Japan has been the world’s largest market for luxury goods, but change seems to be imminently on the horizon. Although brands like Hermes, Chanel and Louis Vuitton all still maintain several outlets throughout the country, many luxury brands are suffering due to a sluggish economy, which has helped trigger a newfound fascination with fast fashion.…
RECESSION IS OVER FOR JET FUEL MARKET
BY MARK ROWE
IS the recession’s worst over for the jet fuel aviation industry? Passenger traffic during this late spring and summer has risen sharply compared with flights year-on-year, giving hope to an industry that Giovanni Bisignani, director general of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), described last year as "structurally sick".…