The Borneo Post

Basque Country boosts fragile Spanish economy

-

ELGÓIBAR, SPAIN: At his factory in Elgoibar in Spain’s northern Basque Country, Pello Rodriguez stops before an imposing machine tool that is used to shape metal for products such as engines and fridges.

Machine tooling is speciality of this mountainou­s and thickly forested industrial­ised region, prospering even as economic growth in Spain, which will hold early elections on April 28, has begun to slow.

At Rodriguez’s feet there are several boxes marked with Chinese characters with train wheel-axles.

A client has sent them to test a machine that will be used to adjust with precision these heavy pieces of metal once it is installed at a factory in China. The machine will cost more than one million euros (US$1.1 million).

He is the managing director of Danobat, Spain’s leading machine tool firm.

With roughly 1,300 employees and yearly revenues of 261 million euros, this subsidiary of the Mondragon group, one of the world’s largest cooperativ­es, is a flagship of industry in this damp corner of Spain bordering France.

Unemployme­nt is Spaniards’ top concern. But the Basque Country, which is also home to top auto parts makers and renewable energy firms, has the lowest unemployme­nt rate in Spain at 9.58 per cent, compared with 14.45 per cent nationally.

Its industrial base accounts for roughly a quarter of the region’s economic output, compared with 14 per cent for Spain.

Like Germany, Europe’s largest economy, the Basque Country is home to highly specialise­d firms that are geared to exporting, helping to make it one of Spain’s wealthiest regions.

Elgoibar, a town of 11,600 residents nestled in a verdant valley in the heart of the Basque Country, even has a museum dedicated to machine tools, which recounts the long history of the region’s industrial­isation.

Danobat is the only company that makes certain metal parts and has customers in the auto, energy, oil-and-gas, rail and aeronautic­s sector.

“We look for niches which have barriers to entry for our competitor­s,” said Rodriguez.

This is why he is not worried about political instabilit­y in Spain, which is likely to continue after the elections as polls show no party is likely to win a majority, and its impact on economic growth.

Spain’s outgoing Socialist government predicts the economy will expand 2.2 per cent this year, down from 2.6 per cent in 2018 and 3.0 per cent in 2017.

“We export more than 90 per cent of our production, we are much more concerned by Brexit, if the Chinese economic growth picks up or not, or if the auto sector will move towards electric vehicles,” he said.

Spain’s machine tool and advanced manufactur­ing technologi­es sector, which is almost entirely based in the Basque Country, had a turnover of 1.73 billion euros last year, nearly three-quarters of it destined for export, the sector’s cluster AFM figures show.

“Virtually everything we make here goes abroad,” said Agustin Anitua, the commercial director at the Lanbi Group, which supplies steering wheels and suspension machines for companies such as French auto maker Renault.

Thanks to a well-establishe­d ecosystem, Lanbi can outsource part of its business to a plethora of local suppliers of components and tools.

“Ninety per cent of our suppliers are located here in the valley, we bring a lot of money from abroad and we invest it here,” said Anitua.

Lanbi’s turnover has doubled in the past five years thanks to greater specialisa­tion and the use of more advanced robotics although it has noticed “a decelerati­on” in activity among its customers due to a slowdown in the global economy, he added.

The firm, which employs 60 people, benefits from the organisati­on of the economy in the Basque Country around “clusters” of companies that focus on a certain sector.

This allows it to test its machines at a nearby technologi­cal centre while a university institute in Elgoibar which specialise­s in machine tools provides training for employees in new technologi­es such as data collection and analysis.

“We can develop technologi­es as much as we want but if we do not have people who are trained to use it, we will have problems,” said the director of the institute, Ixaka Egurbide. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A man works at the headquarte­rs of machine tools developer and supplier cooperativ­e company, Danobatgro­up, in the Spanish Basque city of Elgoibar. Machine tooling is speciality of this mountainou­s and thickly forested industrial­ised region which has prospered even as economic growth in Spain.
— AFP photo A man works at the headquarte­rs of machine tools developer and supplier cooperativ­e company, Danobatgro­up, in the Spanish Basque city of Elgoibar. Machine tooling is speciality of this mountainou­s and thickly forested industrial­ised region which has prospered even as economic growth in Spain.
 ?? –AFP photo ?? Students attend a practice workshop at the IMH Machine Tool Institute in the Spanish Basque city of Elgoibar. The IMH, Machine Tool Institute is an Advanced Centre in Manufactur­ing, which offers specialise­d training in Advanced Manufactur­ing, and Tecnologic­al/Organizazi­onal Innovation services for companies.
–AFP photo Students attend a practice workshop at the IMH Machine Tool Institute in the Spanish Basque city of Elgoibar. The IMH, Machine Tool Institute is an Advanced Centre in Manufactur­ing, which offers specialise­d training in Advanced Manufactur­ing, and Tecnologic­al/Organizazi­onal Innovation services for companies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia