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West meets east: demand from East Asia fuels recycling activity in the Western United States.

Recycling Today, Sept, 2004 by Myron Love

Alpert & Alpert, one of America's largest independent scrap metal recyclers, will be celebrating its 75th anniversary next year. The Los Angeles-based firm will also be opening a new state-of-the-art recycling facility in Long Beach within the next few months that, company President Alan Alpert says, will put Alpert & Alpert in position to be one of the world's largest scrap metal recyclers.

Alpert notes that this is a good time to be in me scrap metal recycling business on the West Coast. "Demand has been incredibly strong for the last couple of years," he says.

That demand, he notes, has been driven by the Asian markets, especially China. "We export a large percentage of the material we purchase," he says. "There was a slight dip in orders for ferrous metals in the spring due to changes and some reconfigurations in China," Alpert says, "but the orders began picking up again in mid-June.

METALS MOVING. George Adams Jr., president of Adams Steel, based in Anaheim, Calif., and John Sacco, president of Sierra Iron & Metal, which is based in Bakersfield, Calif., agree with Alpert's assessment.

Both men are national officers with the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries Inc. (ISRI), Washington, and both represent established successful companies. Sierra I&M is an almost-60-year-old medium-sized scrap metal processor with a sister company that sells processing equipment, while Adams Steel has been a growing business for 30 years.

"The demand has been fairly strong, especially from China, and the prices have been very high," Sacco says. The market price for ferrous scrap has exceeded $100 per ton throughout the year--and sometimes well above that, he notes.

In scrap markets, though, what goes up also comes down. "While it is hard to tell the future, forecasts are for continuing fairly decent demand. It is just that China is still such an unknown. From what I understand, demand from China is good, but I hear the banking system there is a shambles."

Alpert also anticipates continued strong markets in China and elsewhere in East Asia, but suggests that the demand may be more commodity-specific than it has been in the past.

The industry leaders report that domestic demand is also strong right now. Alpert notes that with the economy growing again, industrial output and, with it, the amount of scrap being generated are up.

Sacco reports that 90 percent of Sierra's iron output goes to domestic buyers, while its nonferrous material is mainly sold overseas. "A lot of the available domestic scrap was cleaned out during the first part of the year," he says. "We're not sure how much obsolete scrap is still out there."

He notes that Sierra has added some more staff during the first half of the year and purchased some new equipment. "We may buy a few more pieces," he says.

Adams reports that his firm is in the process of installing two new car shredders, replacing two older shredding plants. He says the new shredders should be in place and operational by the end of the year.

Alpert says that his firm is always looking for expansion possibilities. "We are careful to expand in a measured and controlled manner," he says. "We have built our reputation on quality and integrity. We want to make sure we are able to uphold that reputation."

A FUTURE FOR FIBER. For paper recyclers in the western United States, the amount of export tonnage to Asia varies according to distance from markets and the local demand for their products. Therefore, while a recycled paper processor such as Fiber Trade Inc., based in Burlingame, Calif. (near San Francisco), ships 90 percent of its product overseas, Far West Fibers in Portland, Ore., has more than enough buyers in the area to account for all of its production.

FarWest Fibers has been in business for almost 25 years. The company processes more than 400,000 tons of recycled paper per year. "We deal in predominantly bulk-grade paper," says John Drew, the company's president.

Drew reports that while the company exports a small percentage of its

product, most of its output is sold to pulp and paper mills in the northwestern states. "The mills have been reliable customers who have honored their contracts despite contamination issues and the state of the economy," he says.

Business is "on the mend," Drew observes, as the economy improves. "Alan Greenspan is keeping a lid on inflation," he says.

Drew reports that he is seeing many of the company's clients registering higher sales volumes as consumer demand grows. That translates into more recycled paper being made available for Far West Fibers.

The size of newspapers, however, has been shrinking, he points out. That is cause for some concern. It's not just that readership has changed and circulations are down. As well, the press size for many periodicals and dailies has changed.

"I have a small scale at home and I am in the habit of weighing the Sunday paper," he comments. "Until the economy began to turn around last year, the ad sections were pretty thin and the weight of the paper was down. But there has been good growth in the Portland and Seattle areas, and the ads are back to where they were. That means more recycled paper for us."

 

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