The third largest in the Indian paper industry, Tamil Nadu Newsprint and Papers has ambitious plans to expand rapidly.
Is there a profitable State government-owned listed entity that has rewarded its shareholders continuously? Is there a State government-owned organisation that is on par with the top private players in its business segment? Or, is there a State government-owned entity that can be touted as the greenest?
Well, not many would know that the ₹4,069 crore Tamil Nadu Newsprint & Papers Ltd (TNPL), would make the count on all these questions. A successful experiment of the Tamil Nadu government to produce printing and writing paper (PWP) using the huge quantum of bagasse, a final waste in the sugar production chain, that was coming out of sugar mills in the State, proved to be not only a breakthrough project but also an environment-friendly one.
The TN government, along with IDBI, promoted TNPL in 1979 and remains the single largest shareholder, with 35.32 per cent stake, after IDBI sold its stake. TNPL is now the third largest player in the Indian paper industry with a pulping capacity of 1,180 tonnes per day. It runs the largest bagasse-based paper mill in the world and consumes about 14 million tonnes of bagasse per annum as raw material.
The company’s factory at Kagithapuram in Karur district, TN, commenced production of newsprint and PWP in 1984 with a capacity of 90,000 tonnes per annum. Over four phases, the capacity was enhanced to four lakh tonnes per annum. The total capacity has now increased to six lakh tonnes per annum with a new 2-lakh tonne packaging board unit near Tiruchi. Meanwhile, it has set an ambitious vision under which it seeks to reach a capacity of one million tonnes by 2030.
TNPL produces a wide variety of high-quality paper and coated boards suited for different end-users. While it markets its products across the country, it also exports about 20 per cent of its production to over 35 countries across the globe and is the largest exporter of PWP.