Black (TCB), founded in 1978. Carbon black, also known as soot
and lampblack, was used as a black pigment for inks, food
colorings, and especially for the production of rubber tires. TCB
grew strongly, building the world's largest carbon black facility on
a single location, and counting among its customers the global big
three tire manufacturers. The company was particularly
successful in Japan, where it captured more than half of the total
carbon black market.
Birla's success in
Thailand encouraged the group to extend its operations
elsewhere in the region. In 1975, the company launched a joint
venture in the Philippines, to produce spun yarn. The operation
became the basis of the group's other Filipino holdings, grouped
under the Indo Phil name. Malaysia became the company's next
foreign market, with the opening of an edible oil production
subsidiary in 1978. That business, Pan Century Edible Oils,
became the world's largest single-location palm oil refinery.
In the meantime,
Birla's Indian holdings continued to expand and diversify as well.
Grasim, for example, added cement production in 1985, launching
the Vikram Cement plant at Jawad, in Madhya Pradesh. By the
beginning of the 1990s, that operation had tripled its production
capacity. Through the 1990s, Grasim added other diversified
businesses, including merchant exporter Birla International
Marketing Corporation in 1992, and Vikram Ispat, a gas-based
sponge iron factory, in 1993. Grasim also expanded its cement
holdings, opening two new cement plants, Grasim Cement in
Raipur and Aditya Cement in Shambhupura, in 1995.