UBC Aluminum Scrap 99% baled ubc Ready stock for sale
Negotiable Min Order Quantity Unit
- Required Quantity
-
- Place of Origin
- South Africa
- Brand name
- scrap aluminium can
- Payment Terms
- L/C,MoneyGram,T/T,Western Union
- Production method
- Negotiable
- Shipping / Lead Time
- Negotiable / Negotiable
- Category
- Environment Product Agents , Environment Project , Aluminum Scrap , Copper Scrap , Recycling
Usukhela Milling pty / ltd
- Verified Certificate
-
9
Product name | UBC Aluminum Scrap 99% baled ubc Ready stock for sale | Certification | - |
---|---|---|---|
Category |
Environment Product Agents
Environment Project Aluminum Scrap Copper Scrap Recycling |
Ingredients | - |
Keyword | offer aluminum , ubc aluminum scrap cans , 500 mt are ready , for immediately shipping | Unit Size | - |
Brand name | scrap aluminium can | Unit Weigh | - |
origin | South Africa | Stock | - |
Supply type | - | HS code | - |
Product Information
Specifications
Shall have a minimum density of 14 pounds per cubic foot (225kg/m3),and a maximum density of 17 pounds per cubic foot (273kg/m3) for unflattened UBC and 22 pounds per cubic foot (353kg/m3) for flattened UBC. Size: Minimum 30 cubic feet (.85m3), with bale range dimensions of 24?to 40?(61to132cm) by 30?to 52?(76to132cm) by 40?to 84?(102to213cm).The only acceptable tying method shall be as follows: four to six 5/8?(1.6cm) x .020?(5mm) steel bands, or six to ten # 13 gauge steel wires (aluminum bands or wires are acceptable in equivalent strength and number).
Packaging & Packing size : max 18 inch x 18 inch x 24 inch 4-2) net weight and total weight when loading to a container in pallet = loading is in loose shape, not on pallets 4-3) the numbers of the packed material per one pallet, net and total weight when loading pallets to 20 feet container and 40 feet container.
Minimum Order Quantity: 50MT
Port of Loading :
Durban Port
SGS Inspection before loading
Supply ability per month: 100 MT
Delivery Time: within 15 days
B2B Trade
Price (FOB) | Negotiable | transportation | - |
---|---|---|---|
MOQ | Negotiable | Leadtime | Negotiable |
Payment Options | L/C,MoneyGram,T/T,Western Union | Shipping time | Negotiable |
- President
- jacob zuma
- Address
- 1 Montgomery Drive Mount Edgecombe P.O. Box 194 Durban 4000
- Year Established
- 1990
- No. of Total Employees
- 101-500
- Company introduction
-
Page iii
Contents
Notes, key abbreviations and competitors . iv
Sugar industry profile . v
1. Description of the industry. 1
2. Marketing structure. 4
3. Market value chain . 7
4. Empowerment issues and transformation in the sector. . . . . . 8
5. Local business opportunities and challenges. 9
6. Sugar millers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
7. Acknowledgements. 11
Page iv
Notes
• Usukhela Milling (Pty) Ltd is owned by Illovo Sugar Ltd, and has sold
shares to a black empowerment company.
• Sugar Milling Companies also own sugar estates that produce 12 % of
the total crop.
• Union Co-op Ltd also owns a maize mill and a saw mill.
• Three giant companies in this industry are Illovo, Tongaat-Hulett and
TSB.
• TSB owns five refineries that are known as white end mills, they produce
their own refined sugar.
• Raw sugar produced at remaining mills is routed to Durban where it is
refined at central refinery mills.
• In order to enter the industry, a potential grower must first come to an
agreement with a miller to mill their cane.
• Molatec and Voermol are two animal feeds operations that use byproducts
from cane.
• Ordering of raw cane led by Coca-Cola has greater influence on changing
of prices.
Key abbreviations
SACGA = South African Cane Growers’ Association
SAMA = South African Millers’ Association
SASA = South African Sugar Association
TSB = Transvaal Sugar Limited
COMPETITOR s
Brazil, Thailand, EU, Australia, India, China, USA and Cuba
Page
SUGAR INDUSTRY PROFILE
Cane production
• Area: 430 000 ha, 31 000 ha owned by blacks
• Commercial growers: 1 741
• Developing farmers: 47 344
• Total production: 27 million tons
Commercial delivered: 75 % of the total
Small scale: 13 % of the total
Sugar estates: 12 % of the total
Foreign earnings: R6 billion
Employment: 85 000 workers
Milling: 11 000 workers
Direct and indirect employment: 350 000 jobs
TSB TRANSVAA L
SU GAR LTD
Market share: 17 %
Operates 2 mills
TON GAAT -Hulett
SU GAR LTD
Market share: 31,7 %
Operates 4 mills
ILLOVO SU GAR
LTD
Market share: 45 %
Operates 5 mills
UCL COMPANY
LTD
Market share: 3–5%
Operates 1 mill
USU KHELA MILLIN G
(PTY ) LTD
Ownership: 65 %
black owned
Market share: 2 %
Operates 1 mill
UMVOTI
TRANS PORT
(Umfolozi Mill)
Operates on
mill
3 packaging plants 2 packaging plants 1 packaging plant
3 sugar refineries Refinery operation 1 refinery operation
Downstream
operations
Animal feed operation
(Molatec)
Animal feed operation
(Voermol)
Consumer products
White sugar
Brown sugar
Syrups and specialty
products
Industrial products
Bakers and biscuitmanufacture
Alcoholic beverages
Dairy and ice cream
Sweets and
chocolates
Pharmaceutical
Other products
Tobacco curing
Animal feeds
Guard crop
1 packaging plant
1 sugar refinery
Retailers
Consumers
Page
Commodity profile
Sugar
1. DES CRI PTION OF THE INDUSTRY
The South African sugar industry makes an important contribution to the national economy,
given its agricultural and industrial investments, foreign exchange earnings, its high
employment and linkages with major suppliers, support industries and customers. It is
a diverse industry combining the agricultural activities of sugar-cane cultivation with the
industrial factory production of raw and refined sugar, syrups and specialised sugars, and
a range of by-products. Based on revenue generated through sugar sales, in the SACU
region and world market exports, the South African sugar industry is responsible for generating
an annual average direct income of R6 billion. The South African sugar industry
contributes an estimated average R2 billion to the country’s foreign exchange earnings
on an annual basis. The industry is regulated in terms of the Sugar Act and the Sugar
Industry Agreement, which are binding on all sugar-cane growers and producers of
sugar products. The contribution of the sugar industry to the Gross Value of Agricultural
Production
- Main Product