BT Industrial goes from strength to strength with manufacturing diversification

26th November 2020

BT Industrial goes from strength to strength with manufacturing diversification

From Creamer Media in Johannesburg, this is the Real Economy Report.

Sashnee Moodley:

Plastic pipes manufacturer BT Industrial Group has extended its plastics-processing capacity to include polymer-based medical fabrics and components. Marleny Arnoldi attended a tour of the company’s cleanroom manufacturing facility.

Marleny Arnoldi:

BT Industrial’s electrostatic melt-blown fabric is currently being used to produce FFP2 medical-grade face masks, keeping up with the PPE demand due to Covid-19 and the standard demand that hospitals have for high-quality, locally made masks.

To complement its 2 000 m2 high-density polyethylene pipes manufacturing facility, the company built a cleanroom manufacturing facility that conforms to the International Organisation for Standardisation Class 7 guidelines.

BT Industrial’s face masks feature a proprietary five-layer fabric design and have been found to be on par, if not better in some instances, than what global competitors offer in terms of filtration efficiency and low breathing resistance.

The facility can produce up to 1.7-million of these masks in a month.

MD Kgomotso Lekola tells us how the company has evolved since its establishment over the last four years and its rationale behind entering the medical industry.

BT Industrial MD Kgomotso Lekola:

Marleny Arnoldi:

From the company’s establishment in 2017, it has grown to employ more than 100 people and operate the two distinct manufacturing capabilities at its site in Germiston.

Lekola elaborates.

BT Industrial MD Kgomotso Lekola:

Marleny Arnoldi:

BT Industrial is in the process of getting its CE mark, which is the European Union’s mandatory conformity marking for regulating goods sold within the European Economic Area.

In addition to the cleanroom manufacturing facility, BT Industrial also built

quality testing and research laboratories this year, which can be leveraged once the company ventures into more niche areas of medical device manufacturing for the international market in due course.

Lekola tells us about the company’s expansion plans.

BT Industrial MD Kgomotso Lekola:

Sashnee Moodley:

That’s Creamer Media’s Real Economy Report. Join us again next week for more news and insight into South Africa’s real economy. Don’t forget to listen to the audio version of our Engineering News daily email newsletter.