Skip to main content

BKT has big ambitions in off-highway tyres

India-based tyre manufacturer BKT is pursuing its goal of a wider market share of the industrial construction and mining tyre market with an ambitious programme of new product releases. BKT is a leading player in the agricultural tyre market, which still accounts for around 65% of its current turnover.
January 6, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Lucia Salmaso, managing director, and Piero Torassa, field engineering manager, at BKT

India-based tyre manufacturer 7297 BKT is pursuing its goal of a wider market share of the industrial construction and mining tyre market with an ambitious programme of new product releases. BKT is a leading player in the agricultural tyre market, which still accounts for around 65% of its current turnover. “Our vision is to become a major player in off-highway tyres,” says Lucia Salmaso, BKT managing director, who is based in Italy. To this end, the company entered the industrial construction and mining tyre market seven years ago and now offers a range of products for cranes, dump trucks, reach stackers, forklifts and other equipment. A key factor in achieving its ambitions is BKT’s latest manufacturing plant in Bhuj, India, with state-of-the-art equipment and processes. “The Bhuj plant has almost doubled our production capacity,” says Salmaso. The plant is focused on the company’s construction and mining tyre production and enables the company to offer a wide range of designs and sizes. The plant’s environment also includes housing for employees, plus a hospital, fire station, sports centre and school in line with the company’s philosophy of corporate responsibility. The plant has been able to produce the company’s recently introduced Maglift solid tyres for forklift applications in logistics. “We had to develop not only the tyre but also production facilities,” says Piero Torassa, field engineering manager for BKT. In addition to the new SR 47, SR 51 and SR 53 Earthmax tyres introduced at INTERMAT 2015, BKT is currently field testing an 1800 R25 tyre for port cargo handling applications. “It is important to field test this type of tyre in addition to the indoor testing that we carry out at our plants,” says Torassa. Like all tyre manufacturers, BKT has had to cope with a depressed market since the financial crisis of 2008. However, there is now cause for “cautious optimism”, says Salmaso. “We are finding that there is a more positive attitude in the market, which really needs a push after several years of slowdown,” she says.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Tunnel inspections reveal safety compliance need
    May 9, 2012
    Results show the state of Europe's tunnel infrastructure at its 'most sublime and most depressing quality' as Patrick Smith reports. EuroTAP [European Tunnel Assessment Programme] 2010 has unveiled the results of inspections conducted earlier this year in 26 major tunnels in 13 European countries. The on site inspections, carried out between 12 April and 20 May, 2010, are said to indicate that an "alarming number of operational tunnels across Europe will not be ready to comply with EU tunnel safety rules wh
  • Continuing demand for construction machines
    February 21, 2012
    Corporate results from a series of equipment manufacturers for the early part of 2011 all seem to agree that demand for machines continues to improve.
  • Innovating sustainability: The amo/Debus Gruppe and the high-tech asphalt plant in Hof, Germany
    July 29, 2025
    Founded in 1946 and headquartered in Untersiemau near Coburg, Germany, the amo/Debus Gruppe has grown into a leading force in the building materials and construction logistics industry. With more than 20 locations strategically spread across Northern Bavaria, Thuringia, and Saxony, the company has firmly established itself as a reliable partner in infrastructure development and sustainable construction.
  • Caterpillar eyes better performance in 2015 amid stormy weather
    May 13, 2015
    Caterpillar vice president Paolo Fellin sums up the past year for the global equipment manufacturer and looks at the increasing importance of telematics and machine control. David Arminas reports from Caterpillar’s Demonstration and Learning Centre in Malaga, southern Spain First the good news. Despite the difficulties, especially of the financial markets, 2014 was “a record year for a lot of things” for global heavy equipment maker Caterpillar.Now the bad news. Hang onto your seats because despite some