Producer
Jindal Films (Jindal Poly Films)
Major BOPP/BOPET film maker (acquired ExxonMobil's films business); flexible-packaging films.
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BOPP films
BOPET (polyester) films
Metallized & coated specialty films
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Origin2024
Jindal Films became a top-two global packaging-film maker in part by buying an oil major's business: in 2013 the Indian B.C. Jindal Group acquired ExxonMobil Chemical's worldwide films operations, inheriting its BOPP technology, brands (like Bicor) and plants across the Americas and Europe. It is a notable reversal of the usual direction of industrial flow — an Indian family group absorbing a Western supermajor's specialty-film business and becoming one of the two anchors (with Taghleef) of the concentrated global supply of flexible-packaging film. (Note: this is the B.C. Jindal branch, distinct from the steel-making Jindal families.)
Jindal Films ↗Did you know2024
Jindal makes both BOPP and BOPET (polyester) film off the same core competency — biaxially stretching a molten polymer web into a thin, strong, optically clear film. That one capability serves several worlds at once: BOPP for snack and label packaging, and BOPET for packaging, lamination, and a long tail of technical and industrial uses (electrical insulation, release liners, graphic and imaging films). So a packaging-film company is also, through polyester film, a supplier to industrial and electronics-adjacent applications. The biaxial-orientation line is the shared asset, and it quietly connects the flexible-packaging economy to technical-film markets that have nothing to do with food.
Jindal Films ↗