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Mitr Phol Group

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Mitr Phol Group
IndustryFood processing
Bioenergy
Founded1946; 78 years ago (1946)
HeadquartersKhlong Toei, Bangkok, Thailand
Area served
Thailand
China
Cambodia
Laos
Key people
Isara Vongkusolkit, President[1]
ProductsSugar
Revenue90 billion baht (2018)
Subsidiaries
Websitewww.mitrphol.com

Mitr Phol Group is Thailand's and Asia's biggest sugar and bio-energy producer.

Mitr Phol Sugar Corp is a privately owned group of companies, mainly owned by the Vongkusolkit family. As of 2014, Mitr Phol is ranked as the world's fifth largest sugar producer,[2] and the largest producer in Asia. It is Thailand's largest sugar producer and the second largest in China through its joint venture company East Asia Sugar. In addition to Thailand and China, Mitr Phol has operations and investments in Lao PDR, Cambodia, and most recently Australia. Its key business units include sugar, wood substitute materials, and renewable energy.

History

Mitr Phol sugar business was established as a small family business in Ban Pong District, Ratchaburi Province, producing and trading condensed syrup to sugar mills in 1946. In 1956, the company began to produce its own sugar. In 1983, Mitr Phu Kieo Sugar Mill was constructed in Phu Khiao District, Chaiyaphum Province, with a sugarcane processing capacity of 27,000 tonnes per day. In 1990, Mitr Phol Sugar Mill in Suphanburi Province was established with a processing capacity of 45,500 tonnes per day. The company expanded its business internationally in 1993 to Guangxi Province, China with four mills. Mitr Phol owns seven sugar mills in Guangxi and with an annual capacity of approximately 10 million tonnes of cane, or approximately 1.3 million tonnes of sugar per year. In 1994, Mitr Phol Sugar Mill (Suphanburi Province) was the first mill in Thailand certified by ISO 9002 and has been recognized with a National Certificate of Excellence and Global Standards. In 1995, Mitr Phol took over a sugar company in Phu Wiang District, Khon Kaen Province and named it Mitr Phol Phu Wiang Sugar Mill. In 1997, Mitr Phol constructed a sugar mill in Hai Tung County, China. Later in the same year, Mitr Kalasin Sugar Mill was established, in Kuchinarai District, Kalasin Province, with a processing capacity of 23,000 tonnes per day. In 2006, Mitr Phol broadened its production to Savannakhet Province, Laos and established Mitr Lao Sugar Co., Ltd. to develop sugarcane farming with advanced production technology to export to the European Union. Mitr Phol further expanded its investments to Queensland, Australia.

Operations

In Thailand, Mitr Phol has six sugar mills, with a total processing capacity of 130,500 tons of sugar cane daily. Some mills have refineries attached and produce white sugar. The locations are:

The yearly sugar cane processing capacity is about 20 million tonnes, yielding a sugar output of approximately 2 million tonnes per year.

Outside Thailand, Mitr Phol has seven sugar mills in Guangxi Province, China. In Lao PDR, the "Mitr Lao mill" is in Savannakhet Province.

In 2012, Mitr Phol acquired a stake in the Australian sugar producer, MSF Sugar Limited.

Financials

Mitr Phol's 2018 revenues are expected to be 90 billion baht. Sugar production accounts for 50 billion baht of the total and the remainder is contributed by its peripheral businesses.[2] Revenues are flat due to low world sugar prices (US$26 cents per kilogram), but 2018 production is up over 2017.[2]

Mitr Phol has normal capital expenditure at around six billion baht per year. However, in 2016, 28 billion baht will be spent on the sugar business to develop its facilities and water system. Fifteen billion baht will be spent on renewable energy business, three billion baht on wood substitutes, 3.6 billion baht on overseas businesses, and 800 million baht to develop its logistics system. This budget is to be invested from 2016 to 2020.[3]

Sugar

1. Mitr Phol Pure Refined Sugar 2. Mitr Phol Hygiene Pack 3. Mitr Phol Syrup 4. Mitte Flavoured Syrup 5. Mitr Phol Coffee Sugar 6. Mitr Phol Icing Sugar 7. Mitr Phol Stick Sugar 8. Mitr Phol Calorie 9. Mitr Phol Gold Sugar 10. Mitr Phol Coconut Sugar 11. Mitr Phol Rock Sugar 12. Mitr Phol Brown Sugar 13. Mitr Phol Natural Cane Sugar[4][5]

Wood substitutes

A subsidiary company, Panel Plus Co. Ltd., manufactures particle board and MDF panels from bagasse and rubber wood chips. According to the company, it has the capacity to produce 300,000 cubic metres of particle board a year, 300,000 cubic metres of medium density fibre boards a year, and 23,500,000 square metres of melamine impregnated panels.[6] It has plants in Chaiyaphum and Songkhla Provinces.

Renewable energy

The group is the largest biomass electricity producer in ASEAN and the largest ethanol producer in ASEAN.[7]

Mitr Phol's subsidiary company Mitr Phol Bio-Fuel Co., Ltd., has four ethanol plants with total capacity of 1,100,000 liters per day in Suphan Buri, Chaiyaphum, Kalasin, and Tak Provinces. Molasses, a waste product from the production of sugar, is used as feed stock to produce ethanol which is used for blending in fuel as gasohol. Mitr Phol Bio-Fuel is Thailand's largest ethanol producer.

Another Mitr Phol subsidiary is Mitr Phol Bio-Power Co., Ltd. which runs several biomass power plants attached to sugar mills. These plants burn the bagasse from crushed sugar cane in order to power steam turbines to generate the power needed for the mill. Excess electricity is sold to the national power grid.

The Vongkusolkit family's related businesses include Banpu Public Company Limited, which is listed on the Stock Exchange of Thailand, and the Erawan Group which owns various prime properties throughout the kingdom including the J.W. Marriott Bangkok Hotel, Ploenchit Center building, Amarin Plaza, and the Hyatt Erawan Hotel.

Awards

The group has won numerous awards.[8]

References

  1. ^ "Thailand's 50 Richest". Forbes. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
  2. ^ a b c Chaitrong, Wichit (15 October 2018). "Sugar industry must swallow bitter pill". The Nation. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  3. ^ Srimalee, Somluck. "Mitr Phol lays out Bt50-bn investment plan". The Nation. The Nation. Retrieved April 4, 2016.
  4. ^ Mitr Phol Corporation Ltd.,. "Mitr Phol Sugar". Mitr Phol. Retrieved 2018-10-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  5. ^ Pratruangkrai, Petchanet (9 January 2017). "Mitr Phol committed to embracing modern farming technology methods". The Nation. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  6. ^ "Company Profile". Panel Plus Co., Ltd. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
  7. ^ Toomgum, Sirivish (14 October 2017). "Mitr Phol banks on innovation and technology to sweeten its success". The Nation. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
  8. ^ "AWARD & CERTIFICATION". Mitr Phol. Retrieved 15 October 2018.