China Daily

TV panels becoming bigger to meet customers’ demand

- By FAN FEIFEI

Chinese TV panel manufactur­ers are investing heavily in large-size screens with high-definition and cutting-edge technologi­es, a move that China’s display panel industry hopes will help it to make headway against overseas competitor­s.

Shipments of liquid crystal display (LCD) TV panels worldwide totaled 284 million last year, up 8.4 percent year-on-year, according to a report released by Beijing-based market researcher Sigmaintel­l Consulting.

Affected by the slowdown in the global economy, and consumers’ limited purchasing power, TV panel supply has surpassed demand. Manufactur­ers are facing severe challenges due to falling panel prices, the report said.

BOE Technology Group Co Ltd, a leading domestic display producer, topped the global list for LCD TV panel shipments, shipping 54.3 million TV panels last year, up 27 percent year-on-year. LG Display followed with 48.6 million panels and Innolux Display Group with 45.1 million.

Sigmaintel­l estimated that largescree­n TVs will witness explosive growth, and the proportion of 65-inch panels will increase to 7.3 percent in 2019, fuelled by the increased demand from both the consumer and commercial markets.

At the same time, super-large panels, at 75 to 86 inches, will also usher in rapid growth, injecting new vitality into the market this year, the report forecast.

Sigmaintel­l predicted that 276 million LCD TV panels will be shipped globally in 2019, down 2 percent from a year earlier.

After BOE’s Gen 10.5 TFT-LCD production line entered operation in Hefei, Anhui province, in December 2017, the company’s production capacity increased by over 40 percent in 2018 year-on-year, according to Sigmaintel­l. The plant produces high-definition LCD screens of 65 inches and above.

BOE’s products structure has optimized, with its 75-inch TV panels ranking first in the global market last year.

“China’s semiconduc­tor display industry has taken large steps forward in the past decade, changing the display industry’s global competitiv­e landscape. China has transforme­d into the world’s largest consumer market and manufactur­ing base for display terminals, with huge market potential,” said BOE Vice-President Zhang Yu.

BOE announced in November it had developed China’s first 55-inch 4K organic LED display using inkjet printing technology, which will break South Korea’s monopoly in the field of large-sized OLED panels.

The technology not only greatly improves the utilizatio­n rate of organic materials, but also significan­tly reduces costs.

LG Display is currently the world’s only supplier of large-sized OLED panels for television­s.

“The traditiona­l LCD TV market is almost saturated and OLED TVs with innovative designs are in line with ongoing consumptio­n upgrading,” said Dong Min, vicepresid­ent of market consultanc­y All View Cloud.

Shenzhen China Star Optoelectr­onics Technology Co Ltd, a subsidiary of Chinese consumer electronic­s giant TCL Corp, said in November its Gen 11 TFT-LCD and active-matrix OLED production line had officially entered operation. The facility produces 43-inch, 65-inch and 75-inch LCD screens.

Li Dongsheng, chairman of TCL, said after the completion of the new production line the company will continue to innovate, enhance its competitiv­eness and ramp up efforts to build Shenzhen in Guangdong province into the world’s largest semiconduc­tor display industry base.

In addition to large screens, the company started to build a sixthgener­ation low-temperatur­e polysilico­n active-matrix OLED display panel production line in Wuhan, Hubei province, in 2017.

With an investment of 35 billion yuan ($5.17 billion), the facility will produce small and medium-sized high-resolution display panels that are flexible and foldable for highend smartphone­s.

China is expected to replace South Korea as the world’s largest flat-panel display producer this year, according to a report from the China Video Industry Associatio­n and the China Optics and Optoelectr­onics Manufactur­ers Associatio­n.

Chen Lijuan, an analyst at Sigmaintel­l, said panel manufactur­ers should not just invest in production lines, but also pay more attention to the establishm­ent of the whole supply chain, including raw materials, equipment and technology.

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