Sunarrow closes Hungarian manufacturing plant
ERJ staff report (PRW)
Japanese electronics component moulder Sunarrow has announced the closure of its Hungarian manufacturing plant in Komárom with the loss of 76 jobs.
The plant in north-west Hungary, which opened in 2003, makes and decorates plastic and silicone rubber keymats for cellular phones and other electronic goods. Sunarrow said it would halt production at the end of September 2009.
Komarom plant is one of only two manufacturing units Tokyo-based Sunarrow operates in Europe. The second, also opened in 2003, is in Salo, Finland. Group customers include international names including Nokia, NEC, Sony, Fujitsu and Casio.
The global recession and falling demand for mobile phone handsets in Europe have already had a serious impact on telecoms component manufacturers operating in Komárom. Earlier this year, the Finnish handset moulder Perlos, owned by Taiwanese electronics group Lite-On Technology, shut down its Komárom plant with the loss of more than 500 jobs.
Sunarrow, which aims its output at customers in Western and Eastern Europe, uses decorative techniques including metal hot stamping and mirror printing with metallised ink to give products an extra gloss finish.The Japanese company also operates three Chinese plants in Xiamen, Beijing and Shenzhen, one at Saraburi, Thailand, and four in Japan.
This is an external link and should open in a new window. If the window does not appear, please check your pop-up blocking software. ERJ is not responsible for the content of external sites.
Sunarrow closes Hungarian manufacturing plant from European Plastics News (a Crain publication)
This article is only available to subscribers - subscribe today
Subscribe for unlimited access. A subscription to European Rubber Journal includes:
- Every issue of European Rubber Journal (6 issues) including Special Reports & Maps.
- Unlimited access to ERJ articles online
- Daily email newsletter – the latest news direct to your inbox
- Access to the ERJ online archive