Showing posts with label Organic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Organic. Show all posts



Well on their way to becoming the de facto standard for premium pet products in the pet specialty channel and other upscale venues, natural and organic pet products continue as a top-growth market segment despite the 2008 economic downturn, registering annual percentage growth in the double digits. Doing their part, all of the major mass-market and cross-channel marketers are now fully tapping into the trend, keeping pressure on smaller marketers to scale up their product offerings even further. At the same time, new contenders continue to enter the field, including under celebrity-backed brands like Dog Whisperer (Cesar Millan) and Nutrish (Rachael Ray), with Ellen DeGeneres having purchased a stake in the already well established Halo Purely for Pets.

Also underpinning market advancement is ongoing strong consumer demand for products perceived to be safer, an appeal that got a big boost from the Spring 2007 recalls and which continues to define the way marketers formulate and position products. According to Packaged Facts’ own pet owner poll, conducted in February 2009, 62% of dog owners and 56% of cat owners purchased natural/organic pet products in the last three months, with 16% of dog or cat owners purchasing organic food within the same period. Moreover, nearly half of pet owners would buy more natural/organic pet products if they were more widely available and almost two-thirds would do so if they were more affordable. Featuring exclusive consumer data from this pet owner survey, the report homes in on food and nonfood purchasing trends as well as attitudes and demographic characteristics of natural and organic pet product purchasers.

Building on the analysis presented in the previous two editions of this report, Natural, Organic and Eco-Friendly Pet Products in the U.S., 3rd Edition divides the market into two classifications—pet food and pet care—with the latter defined as encompassing all nonfood pet supplies (cat litter, grooming products, pet supplements, clean-up products, etc.). For each classification, coverage includes historical and projected retail sales estimates from 2005 through 2014, competitive strategies and profiles of key players, and trends in new product development and competitive positioning including human-grade, U.S. sourced, and sustainable. Additional data sources including Information Resources, Inc.’s InfoScan Review for the mass-market channel,SPINSscan data for natural supermarkets, Datamonitor Product Launch Analytics data tracking new product introductions, Experian Simmons data profiling overall trends in pet ownership and product purchasing, and data from the American Pet Products Association (APPA) 2009-2010 National Pet Owners Survey.

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Original Source: Pet Products Market
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Browse complete Printed, Organic & Flexible Electronics Forecasts, Players & Opportunities 2010-2020 Report


Browse all ID Techex Market Research Reports

This report provides the most comprehensive view of the topic, giving detailed ten year forecasts by device type. The market is analyzed by territory, printed vs non printed, rigid vs flexible, inorganic vs organic, cost of materials vs process cost and much more, with over 200 tables and figures. Activities of over 1000 leading companies are given.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS


1. INTRODUCTION

1.2. Twenty year forecasts of unusual breadth

1.3. Terminology and definitions

1.4. Scope for printed electronics and electrics

1.5. There is a bigger picture

1.6. Printed electronics products today

1.6.1. New technologies, more opportunity

1.6.2. With or without a silicon chip

1.6.3. Highest volume products with no silicon chip

1.6.4. Printed electronics with silicon chips

1.6.5. Electronic apparel

1.6.6. Display and lighting

1.6.7. Photovoltaic power by the mile

1.6.8. Stretchable electronic products for sale

1.6.9. A view from Toppan Forms

1.7. Displays are the main sector for now

1.8. Photovoltaics beyond conventional silicon are the second largest market

1.9. How printed electronics is being applied

1.10. Surprisingly poor progress with low cost electronics so far

1.11. Threat - silicon chips keep getting cheaper

1.12. Printed electronics for smart packaging

1.13. Driving forces for disposable electronics

1.14. Balance of reporting on printed and organic electronics

1.15. Inorganic patterning shows the way

1.16. Great uncertainty

1.17. Challenging conventional electronics

1.18. Flexible is a Big Market

1.19. Assumptions for our forecasts

1.20. Despite recession, finance for printed electronics is not drying up
2. LOGIC AND MEMORY

2.1. Logic and Memory Market Forecasts 2010-2020

2.1.1. Logic and memory forecasts 2010-2020

2.2. Impact on silicon

2.3. Transistor design

2.3.2. New TFT geometry

2.3.3. Advantages of printed and thin film transistors and memory vs traditional silicon

2.3.4. The main options for the printed semiconductor

2.3.5. Benefits and applications envisaged for TFTCs in general

2.3.6. Development path

2.3.7. Obtaining higher frequency performance

2.3.8. Shakeout of organic transistor developers

2.3.9. Breakthrough in printed inorganic performance in from Kovio

2.3.10. NanoGram

2.3.11. Progress towards p-type metal oxide semiconductors

2.3.12. Do organic transistors have a future?

2.3.13. 3D printed silicon transistors - Japan

2.3.14. Choice of printing technologies

2.3.15. Company strategy and value chain

2.4. Memory

2.5. Flexible Memristor

2.6. RFID

2.6.1. Market for RFID

2.6.2. Ultimate potential for highest volume RFID

2.6.3. Penetration of chipless/printed RFID
3. DISPLAYS

3.1. Market drivers

3.2. OLEDs as displays for electronic products

3.2.2. Developers of OLEDs

3.2.3. Mobile phones and OLEDs

3.2.4. Digital Cameras and OLEDs

3.2.5. Audio/Visual players and OLEDs

3.2.6. TV sets and OLEDs

3.2.7. OLED market forecasts 2010-2020

3.2.8. Impediments to OLED adoption

3.2.9. Unmet technical needs for OLEDs

3.3. Electrophoretic

3.3.2. Applications of E-paper displays

3.3.3. The Killer Application

3.3.4. Electrophoretic displays market forecasts 2010-2020

3.4. Electrochromic

3.4.2. Electrochromic displays market forecasts 2010-2020

3.5. AC Electroluminescent

3.5.1. Applications

3.5.2. Electroluminescent displays market forecasts 2010 2020

3.6. Other display technologies

3.6.1. Thermochromic

3.6.2. Electrowetting displays

3.6.3. Liquavista, The Netherlands

3.6.4. ITRI, Taiwan and PVI, Taiwan

3.6.5. Electrochemical displays on paper

3.6.6. Flexible LCDs

3.6.7. Kent Displays

3.6.8. Other displays market size 2010-2020
4. LIGHTING

4.1. Significance of lighting and challenges

4.2. Comparisons of lighting technologies

4.3. General illumination market

4.4. Lighting forecasts 2010-2020

4.5. Value Chain and examples of OLED lighting

4.6. AC electroluminescent lighting

4.7. LEDs
5. POWER: PHOTOVOLTAICS AND BATTERIES

5.1. Photovoltaics

5.1.1. Thin film Photovoltaics

5.1.2. Comparison of technologies

5.1.3. Solar cell production by company

5.1.4. Trends by territory

5.1.5. Parameters for comparing Photovoltaic technologies

5.2. Photovoltaics Forecasts

5.2.1. Forecast analysis

5.2.2. Photovoltaic subsidies - should more be given?

5.2.3. The need for storage

5.2.4. Installation of photovoltaics

5.2.5. Hope for silicon photovoltaics to reach grid price parity

5.2.6. Strategies of market entry for new, potentially cheaper technologies

5.2.7. Photovoltaics in 2009/2010 after the mid 2008 peak

5.3. Batteries

5.3.1. Importance of laminar batteries

5.3.2. Button batteries vs laminar batteries

5.3.3. Choices of laminar battery

5.3.4. Applications of laminar batteries

5.3.5. Infinite Power Solutions

5.3.6. Solicore, USA

5.3.7. Power Paper

5.3.8. Blue Spark

5.3.9. VoltaFlex

5.3.10. Enfucell

5.4. Printed batteries forecasts 2010-2020

5.4.2. Laminar batteries - missing the big opportunity?

5.5. Fuel cells
6. SENSORS AND OTHER ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS

6.1. General situation and examples

6.2. Photodetector arrays

6.2.1. Printed flexible scanners

6.3. Touch screens

6.4. Successes and failures

6.5. Sensor Forecasts 2010-2020
7. MARKET BY TERRITORY, COMPONENTS, MATERIALS, OPPORTUNITIES

7.1. Market by territory

7.1.1. Number of active organisations globally in this field

7.1.2. Geographical split 2010-2020

7.1.3. Giant corporations of the world and their progress with printed electronics

7.2. The total market opportunity by component

7.3. Organic versus Inorganic

7.4. Printed versus non printed electronics

7.5. Flexible/conformal versus rigid electronics

7.6. Market forecasts for materials 2010-2020

7.7. Impact of printed electronics on conventional markets

7.7.2. Impact on end-use markets

7.7.3. Potential markets

7.8. Printed electronics: fundraising, investors, list of companies

7.8.1. Printed Electronics Commercial Fund Raising Activities

7.8.2. Printed Electronics Government Funded Activities
8. UNMET NEEDS, OPPORTUNITIES AND PROGRESS

8.1. Statistics for materials running out

8.1.1. Indium

8.1.2. Rare Earths

8.1.3. Escape Routes

8.1.4. Selenium

8.1.5. Quantum dots, carbon nanotubes, common compounds

8.1.6. Material supply and sustainability of thin film CIGS and CdTe Photovoltaics

8.2. Low temperature processes/curing

8.2.1. New ink formulations

8.2.2. Breakthrough in metal ink cure from Novacentrix: room temperature on cheap substrates

8.2.3. New Copper ink

8.3. Backplane transistor arrays hold up AMOLED market penetration

8.4. Need for better flexible, transparent, low cost barriers

8.5. Lack of standardised benchmarking

8.6. Urgent need for creative product design
9. COMPANY PROFILES

9.1.1. ACREO

9.1.2. Asahi Kasei

9.1.3. Asahi Glass

9.1.4. BASF

9.1.5. DaiNippon Printing

9.1.6. Evonik

9.1.7. Fujifilm Dimatix

9.1.8. G24i

9.1.9. HC Starck

9.1.10. Hewlett Packard

9.1.11. Holst Centre

9.1.12. InkTec

9.1.13. ITRI Taiwan

9.1.14. Konarka

9.1.15. Kovio Inc

9.1.16. Merck Chemicals

9.1.17. National Information Society Agency

9.1.18. Optomec

9.1.19. Organic ID

9.1.20. Philips

9.1.21. Plastic E Print

9.1.22. Plastic Logic

9.1.23. Plextronics

9.1.24. PolyIC

9.1.25. PVI

9.1.26. Samsung

9.1.27. Semiconductor Energy Laboratory

9.1.28. Seiko Epson

9.1.29. Soligie

9.1.30. Thin Film Electronics

9.1.31. Toppan Forms

9.1.32. Toppan Printing

9.1.33. University of Tokyo

9.1.34. Waseda University

9.1.35. Other players in this value chain
APPENDIX 1: MATRIX OF PRINTED ELECTRONICS SUPPLIERS AND ACTIVITIES

APPENDIX 2: IDTECHEX PUBLICATIONS AND CONSULTANCY



About Us

ReportsandReports comprises an online library of 10,000 reports, in-depth market research studies of over 5000 micro markets, and 25 industry specific websites. Our client list boasts almost all well-known publishers of such reports across the globe. We as a third-party reseller of market research reports employ a number of marketing tools, such as press releases, email-marketing and effective search-engine optimization techniques to drive revenues for our clients. We also provide 24/7 online and offline support service to our customers.

Contact:

Ms. Sunita

7557 Rambler road,

Suite 727, Dallas, TX 75231

Tel: +1-888-989-8004

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