4 June 2010, Exeter, Ontario – Canadian warp and circular
knitter Syfilco Ltd has reported its business is booming following the BP oil
spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Syfilco, a family business founded in the 1970s manufactures
knitted polyester fabric sleeves and polyethylene netting sleeves that are filled
with absorbent materials to create booms used to contain the spill in the Gulf.
According to local newspaper reports, production of sleeves
at Syfilco has recently doubled due to the spill, causing the company to buy
new equipment and dust off older equipment that had been mothballed.
Syfilco’s vice president Andy de Boer told the Exeter Times-Advocate
newspaper reporters that the company had the capability to produce 160 miles of
boom per week but had recently increased that to 215 miles per week. De Boer
also said that as the new machinery comes on line, it might be as high as 300
miles per week.
Demand is expected to last nine months due to the timeline
given for the clean-up in the Gulf and there will also be a need to replenish
emergency reserves depleted due to the spill, according to De Boer. Syfilco has
been producing boom sleeves since the Exxon Valdez oil spill in 1989 and also
manufactures agricultural drainage filters, hay bale netting and shade netting.
The company runs a plant of small diameter circular knitting
machines for the inner fabric sleeves of the casings and a plant of double
needle bar raschel machines for the split film outer net sleeves. Fabric
sleeves are made from polyester for general applications or polypropylene for
absorption of aggressive liquids.
The company specializes in manufacturing bulk fabrics for
producers or distributors who incorporate the fabrics into finished products or
end-use markets. Syfilco Ltd was founded by Sybren de Boer 1979, who converted
a former grass seed mill into a knitting mill.
To learn more about how knitted nets are made, download Karl
Mayer’s ‘Net Textiles’ brochure