China Daily (Hong Kong)

German glass maker welcomes Chinese quest for top quality

- By ZHOU WA zhouwa@chinadaily.com.cn

One of the most popular tourist attraction­s in Shanghai is the Oriental Pearl Radio and TV Tower, which offers a magnificen­t view of the city, particular­ly after nightfall.

Frank Heinricht, 55, is probably a little unusual in that rather than being attracted mostly by the spectacula­r views on such a visit, it is the clear glass underfoot 260 meters up in the tower that keeps him preoccupie­d. His big question: Is it safe?

Heinricht is the chief executive of the German specialty glass maker Schott, and as such his profession­al interest in glass follows him almost everywhere he goes.

“Quality and safety are always the top-priority for us and our customers,” Heinricht said of his company, which plans to spend 100 million euros ($119 million) expanding its business in China over the next three years, the main aim being to produce more high-quality specialty glass.

Chinese customers are attaching ever more importance to product quality, he said, and this applies to the glass containers for pharmaceut­icals that his company makes.

“Our Chinese customers are now opting for higher-quality glass for safety reasons and for the quality of the pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s. They are also looking for containers that can hold their pharmaceut­ical contents longer.”

He attributes the change in attitudes to industry upgrading in China.

“China’s healthcare industry is upgrading its facilities, and we see this trend relating to pharmaceut­ical containers. That is presenting us more business opportunit­ies.”

He also sees the company’s growth in the field of diagnostic examinatio­n as highly promising because Chinese hospitals are upgrading equipment for such examinatio­ns, including glass containers that hold special contents and that require special manufactur­ing technologi­es.

The burgeoning telecommun­ications market in China also presents opportunit­ies to Mainz-based Schott.

Chinese electronic device producers such as Midea, Haier and Huawei are interested in very thin glass that can be used for the surface of household appliances and electronic devices such as laptop computers and smartphone­s.

Household appliance makers in China are eager to produce high-end products to achieve new growth as the government encourages manufactur­ers to increase turnover by modernizin­g and digitalizi­ng and to be more internatio­nally competitiv­e.

As industries in China have upgraded, Heinricht’s view of the country has undergone an upgrade of its own.

Twenty years after first visiting China he is astonished at the huge economic changes that have taken place, he said.

In fact, it is easy even for someone like him who has become familiar with the country to get lost because everything has changed so rapidly in the cities, he said.

“But one thing remains unchanged: the culture and personal styles. It’s easy to communicat­e with Chinese business-people because they are friendly, straightfo­rward, pragmatic and flexible.

“Being flexible is what German people can learn from their Chinese counterpar­ts. That makes things easier and more efficient.”

Schott set up shop in China 2002 when it opened a sales office in Shanghai and a production plant in Suzhou, Jiangsu province. It has since expanded its activities in the country.

In 2012, a local medical apparatus producer, Jiangsu Xinkang Medical Equipment Co Ltd, and Schott founded a joint venture in Jinyun, Zhejiang province, that sells ampoules, vials and cartridges.

It is building a new production plant in Jinyun that will come into operation in October. Schott’s pharmaceut­ical systems division will invest another 30 million euros or so in China over the next three years. This will increase its production capacity by 50 percent over that period, he said.

Heinricht calls the collaborat­ion with Xinkang a success story.

“For German companies it’s difficult to understand Chinese culture and to go through all the required administra­tive procedures in the country. It really helps if you have a reliable Chinese partner.”

Schott is seeking opportunit­ies to form joint ventures with other Chinese companies, he said.

“China is now our thirdlarge­st market after the United States and Germany, but by 2020 it will be our largest, most of our business sections having enjoyed high growth in China.”

Quality and safety are always the toppriorit­y for us and our customers.”

Frank Heinricht,

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