manufactured · input

Hygiene Spunbond/Airthrough Nonwoven (Topsheet)

Lightweight (10–25 gsm) spunbond and airthrough-bonded PP nonwovens used as topsheet, backsheet laminate and acquisition layers in pads, liners and diapers.

12

Source countries

5

Companies

1

Goods affected

0

Claims on record

What depends on it

Goods that need this input

1 essential American goods rely on hygiene spunbond/airthrough nonwoven (topsheet) somewhere upstream in their supply chain.

Where it comes from

Source countries

Share of global supply, by country.

Who makes it

Supplier companies

5 companies produce hygiene spunbond/airthrough nonwoven (topsheet).

Berry Global Group, Inc.(BERY)

HQ US

Berry Global Group, Inc. (Evansville IN; NYSE: BERY; ~$13B revenue) is one of the world's largest manufacturers of nonwoven fabrics and plastic packaging. Berry's Nonwoven Specialties segment (including Reemay, Avgol, and Fiberweb brands acquired over 2014-2019) operates meltblown, spunbond, and SMS (spunbond-meltblown-spunbond) lines globally. Berry acquired Avgol Nonwovens (Israel/China/India) in 2019 for $430M, making it the world's second-largest hygiene nonwoven producer. Key meltblown facilities: Carlisle UK, Biesheim France, Clervaux Luxembourg, Mooresville NC, and multiple Asian sites. Berry supplies meltblown filtration fabric for N95 respirators, HVAC filters, surgical drapes, and automotive cabin air filters. Dual-use across healthcare, hygiene, and industrial filtration.

Fitesa S.A.

HQ BR

One of the largest global producers of spunbond/spunmelt nonwovens for hygiene applications (topsheet, backsheet, ADL).

Indorama Ventures(IVL.BK)

HQ TH

World's largest PET resin producer; produces 1 in every 5 PET bottles globally; operates 20+ PET production plants and 20+ recycling facilities across 5 continents; investing $1.5B to reach 750,000 tonnes/year rPET recycling capacity; named #1 PET/PBT resin company globally in 2025 evaluation

Mitsui Chemicals(4183.T)

HQ JP

Japanese chemical conglomerate (TYO: 4183, HQ Tokyo); recognized as the quality leader for ultra-high-purity electronic grade IPA for semiconductor applications, achieving parts-per-billion impurity levels. In Q2 2024, Mitsui Chemicals introduced a bio-based IPA derived from renewable acetone with 25,000 MT/year initial capacity — part of Japan's push toward bio-based chemicals. Mitsui is one of the world's leading specialty chemical companies with deep ties to the Mitsui Group keiretsu (same group as Mitsui & Co. trading, Mitsui Fudosan real estate, etc.). Mitsui Chemicals' IPA is particularly important for Japanese and Taiwanese semiconductor fabs. The company that dominates bio-based IPA is also part of the same industrial group that owns one of Japan's largest steel mills (Nippon Steel was historically Mitsui-linked).

Toray Industries, Inc.(3402.T)

HQ JP

Toray Industries, Inc. (Tokyo; TSE: 3402; ~¥2.6T revenue) is Japan's largest synthetic fiber manufacturer and a major producer of SMS (spunbond-meltblown-spunbond) nonwoven fabrics for medical and hygiene applications. Toray's nonwovens business (Fibers & Textiles segment) produces meltblown and spunmelt fabrics at facilities in Japan, South Korea, China, and Southeast Asia. Toray's Eclat SMS fabric — a tri-layer structure with meltblown as the filtration core — is used in surgical gowns, drapes, and masks. Toray supplies SMS nonwoven to Kimberly-Clark, Mölnlycke Health Care, and major Asian mask manufacturers. Toray is also a major producer of polypropylene resin (feedstock for meltblown) through its petrochemicals affiliates, giving partial upstream integration.