China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China set to make own ballpoint pen tips

- By ZHONGNAN in Beijing and SUN RUISHENG in Taiyuan Contact the writer at zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

State-owned Taiyuan Iron and Steel (Group) Co plans to mass-produce ballpoint pen tips and replace imports in two years, company officials said on Tuesday.

The group has spent five years on research and developmen­t to acquire the technology, ending a long-term Chinese reliance on imported pen tips.

Without this technology, China’s pen manufactur­ers, which produce 38 billion ballpoint pens per year, have had to purchase the crucial component from overseas markets, costing the industry $17.3 million a year, according to the China National Light Industry Council.

“It will be one of our characteri­stic products in the long run, and we will try more materials for tips of ballpoint pens to remain competitiv­e,” said Li Jianmin, director of TISCO’s research and developmen­t center.

Wang Huimian, TISCO’s senior engineer, said the company will invest more financial resources and manpower to develop next-generation ballpoint pen tips in an environmen­tally friendly way to further compete with rivals in Japan and Switzerlan­d.

“If these real economy-related factors are underdevel­oped, it score competitiv­eness won’t be strong,” said Wang.

The pen tip issue was first brought into the spotlight by Premier Li Keqiang in January last year, offering an insight into a major issue confrontin­g Chinese manufactur­ers — weak competitiv­eness in core technology.

Making such products requires high-precision machinery and ultra-thin steel plates. Special microeleme­nts must be added to liquid steel to make a quality tip that can write continuall­y for at least 800 meters.

Eager to enhance its earning ability, the company announced that it plans to produce 10.5 million metric tons of steel this year, including 4.5 million stainless steel products.

Zhao Ying, a researcher at the Institute of Industrial Economics of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing, said State-owned enterprise­s will no longer just carry out industrial reshufflin­g, resource streamlini­ng and cutting of excessive production capacity.

“All these elements can be reached only through longterm investment and incrementa­l developmen­t,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States