25 years of AG Poly Packs: Trading, manufacturing, R&D

Rigid packaging solutions provider for food, pharmaceuticals

267
AG Poly Packs
Gaurav Daga, director, AG Poly Packs

Established in the year 1997, AG Poly Packs is now in its 26th year of operations. It started with trading in rigid packaging for the food industry and gradually moved into pharmaceuticals. Till 2010, AG Poly Packs was getting rigid packaging products manufactured in different parts of the country and selling them in northern India. After 2010, it started importing innovative dispensing solutions and also sold them globally.

In 2012, AG Poly Packs started its first 50,000-square feet manufacturing facility in Ghaziabad where it is into injection and blow molding with 38 machines. In 2020, it started a second manufacturing facility under the name of AG Synergy to manufacture PET bottles and spray pumps through injection stretch blow molding. At present, 60% share of the business is through manufacturing while the remaining 40% is through trading, as Packaging South Asia reported in its PackPlus coverage for 2022.

The company manufactures PET bottles for pharmaceutical and cosmetic applications; jars for cream containers, body lotions and conditioners; balm containers; tablet containers; roll-on bottles; and HDPE bottles. It also imports dispensing bottles, spray pumps, mist pumps, dispenser pumps, flip-top closures, and screws on closures to give full packaging solutions to customers.

AG Poly Packs manufactures PET bottles through the Japanese ASB machines, while it uses Milacron machines for injection molding. The HDPE bottles are being manufactured through CMP machines and Victor machines are being used for injection blow molding (IBM).

The company has four offices in Ghaziabad, Delhi, Mumbai and Vapi in Gujarat. A 30,000 square feet facility is under construction at Parwanoo in Himachal Pradesh. The factory acceptance test (FAT) is due for this facility in the first week of June while the Swiss machines to be installed will arrive by July end. “We are planning to expand our footprint in Western India in terms of manufacturing facilities. We are exploring opportunities in Gujarat and Maharashtra,” said Gaurav Daga, director, AG Poly Packs, in a recent interaction with Packaging South Asia.

With 72 machines for manufacturing technologies and seven different assembly lines, AG Poly Packs aims to provide complete solutions to customers. “We want to provide flexible packaging solutions to customers in addition to rigid packaging,” Daga said.

Sustainable solutions

With sustainability being the buzzword, corporates are on the lookout for sustainable solutions. Companies are working on either reducing or reusing plastics or reinventing it. With this intent in mind, AG Poly Packs has done almost 30% weight reduction in closures. Daga said, “We have the option of using PCR (post-consumer recycled laminate). We are coming up with solutions where the outer body of the jar is PCR and the inner cup is made entirely of virgin plastic, so there is no issue in stability. We are also coming up with plastic barrier laminates in our HP facility.”

The company strictly adheres to Central Public Control Board (CPCB) norms. Mama Earth, Wow Skin Science, Mcaffeine, Denver, MyGlamm, Emami, Joy, Dot & Key, Man Matters, Unilever, Dabur, Cipla, Dr Willmar Schwabe, Palmolive, Vestige, Modicare, Patanjali, and Khadi are some of its well-known clients.

Sanitizer bottle manufacturing during Covid-19

AG Poly Packs experienced an all-time high in terms of turnover and profitability during the Covid-19 pandemic, Daga said. “Prior to the Covid era, hardly any companies were into manufacturing of sanitizers. When swine flu first hit India, people came to know what a sanitizer is. We developed some bottles and are supplying them to brands such as Cipla, Godrej, Bajaj and Diversey which manufacture sanitizers.

“Even though the lockdown happened in March, sanitizers have been flooding the market since December-end. And both our facilities were heavily booked. Our plant was shut on the first few days of the lockdown. We approached the agencies concerned, whose officials visited us and taking into account the gravity of the situation, gave us approval to open the plant for the manufacture of sanitizer bottles. We received 10 passes to run our vehicles. Most of our employees were working from home through SAP. Factory workers were housed in dormitory blocks in our units.”

R&D and innovation

AG Poly Packs is coming up with its own 15,000-square feet R&D and innovation center. Daga said, “We already have some machines that can develop pilot tools for customers.” The company can produce mockups for pumps and dispenser bottles, which are then harnessed by brands for photo shoots, product launches and labels. It has an in-house design team that helps in creating models for boosting sales.

All manufacturing facilities of AG Poly Packs are BRC-certified, with strict QA, QC, and PDI processes for product quality assurance. On the plastics industry, Daga shared, “The plastics industry in India is doing comparatively well, even though sentiments are not that good. We need to find a solution to salvage plastic – whether to use it to make roads or other infrastructure. All industries in India are manufacturing polymers, including GAIL, Reliance Industries, and Indian Oil – their major revenue is from plastics.”

The impact, resilience, and growth of responsible packaging in a wide region are daily chronicled by Packaging South Asia.

A multi-channel B2B publication and digital platform such as Packaging South Asia is always aware of the prospect of new beginnings and renewal. Its 16-year-old print monthly, based in New Delhi, India has demonstrated its commitment to progress and growth. The Indian and Asian packaging industries have shown resilience in the face of ongoing challenges over the past three years.

As we present our publishing plan for 2023, India’s real GDP growth for the financial year ending 31 March 2023 will reach 6.3%. Packaging industry growth has exceeded GDP growth even when allowing for inflation in the past three years.

The capacity for flexible film manufacturing in India increased by 33% over the past three years. With orders in place, we expect another 33% capacity addition from 2023 to 2025. Capacities in monocartons, corrugation, aseptic liquid packaging, and labels have grown similarly. The numbers are positive for most of the economies in the region – our platform increasingly reaches and influences these.

Even given the disruptions of supply chains, raw material prices, and the challenge of responsible and sustainable packaging, packaging in all its creative forms and purposes has significant headroom to grow in India and Asia. Our context and coverage engulf the entire packaging supply chain – from concept to shelf and further – to waste collection and recycling. We target brand owners, product managers, raw material suppliers, packaging designers and converters, and recyclers.

In an admittedly fragmented and textured terrain, this is the right time to plan your participation and marketing support communication – in our impactful and highly targeted business platform. Tell us what you need. Speak and write to our editorial and advertising teams! For advertisement ads1@ippgroup.in , for editorial info@ippgroup.in and for subscriptions subscription@ippgroup.in

– Naresh Khanna

Subscribe Now
unnamed 1

NEWSLETTER

Subscribe to our Newsletter

As 2023 begins and FY 23-24 unfolds, will you support us?

What lies in store for the packaging industry in India and South Asia this coming year? Inflation, disruption of supply chains or environmental regulation? Or the resumption of high rural demand, continued investment and industry consolidation? Whatever happens, Packaging South Asia will be there, providing clarity and independent technical and business information in India and South Asia and around the world. We are a compact Indian organization bringing a window of fair and rigorous technical and business information that the industry can access this year and beyond. Please support us with your advertising and subscriptions, to keep us going and growing.

Thank you.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here