In a sector witnessing accelerated global demand and heightened scrutiny over quality and sustainability, Gujarat-based Anar Chemicals LLP has emerged as one of the Indian companies gaining international attention. Founded more than four decades ago in the industrial belt of Vatva, the company has steadily expanded from a small laboratory unit into a manufacturer serving clients across multiple continents.

While the specialty chemicals ecosystem in India has been undergoing consolidation and technological upgrades, Anar Chemicals’ leadership attributes its long-term stability to a combination of incremental innovation, export-led growth, and consistent adherence to environmental and safety standards. Its evolution, however, also mirrors broader shifts in India’s chemicals industry, which is increasingly moving toward higher-value, niche applications.

Four-Decade Journey Rooted in Technical Experimentation

The company’s origins date back to the early 1980s, when brothers Ajay Navnitbhai Choksi and Sanjay Navnitbhai Choksi established a small unit with an intention to apply both modern chemical engineering principles and insights drawn from India’s traditional dyeing practices. The founders one trained in chemical engineering at BITS Pilani, the other in business and finance began with limited infrastructure but focused on developing dyes that met international standards, at a time when such capabilities were largely limited to larger corporations.

Through the 1980s and 1990s, Anar Chemicals steadily built a portfolio of eco-smart liquid dyes and specialty colorants. According to the company, it was among the first Indian manufacturers to develop Naphthol AS-CL pigment-grade products as well as special metal phthalocyanines used in pigments, catalysts, and rubber processing. It also became one of the early small-scale chemical firms to secure ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 certifications simultaneously important benchmarks during an era when compliance requirements in export markets were becoming more stringent.

International Expansion and Sectoral Diversification

By the late 1980s, Anar Chemicals began exporting to markets in Europe, the United States, Japan, and South Korea regions known for rigorous quality specifications in dyes and intermediates. The company says this period marked a turning point, as it forced a shift from commodity production to more controlled, application-driven manufacturing.

Understanding Liquid Solvent Dyes and Their Use in Fuels and Waxes

Liquid Solvent Dyes play a critical role in fuel identification and wax coloration, especially as global industries adopt stricter monitoring and anti-adulteration practices. These oil-soluble dyes are used in petrol, diesel, gasoline, kerosene, gas oil, and heating oil to differentiate fuel grades and comply with regulatory color-coding systems aimed at preventing misuse. In wax-based applications such as paraffin and soy candle manufacturing Liquid Solvent Dyes ensure uniform, stable coloration without affecting burn or fragrance performance. Anar Chemicals supplies a broad range of these formulations engineered for high miscibility, thermal stability, and non-interference with fuel or wax characteristics, supporting sectors where accuracy, safety, and compliance are operational priorities.

Diversification into Multiple Dye Segments

Diversification has been a key theme throughout the 2000s and 2010s. The company reports developing fuel dyes, candle dyes, smoke dyes, solvent dyes, and flame retardant chemicals designed for niche industrial uses. Many of these products serve clients in sectors such as petrochemicals, aerospace signaling, consumer goods, and engineering plastics.

Its fuel dye segment, for instance, caters to refineries seeking to differentiate fuels through color coding an increasingly important method to combat adulteration. Similarly, smoke dyes produced by the company are used in airshows, military training, emergency response operations, and crowd-control environments. The company highlights qualities such as color stability, hang time, and regulatory compliance as central to these formulations.

Candle dyes an emerging market in both industrial and artisanal categories represent another line where Anar Chemicals claims strong R&D control and global demand.

Growing Focus on Metal Phthalocyanines and Naphthols

Among its various categories, Anar Chemicals continues to emphasize metal phthalocyanines (M-PC), long-standing colorants used in rubber processing, printing inks, catalysts, and color filters. With more than 30 years of experience in this segment, the company manufactures iron, nickel, and zinc phthalocyanines compounds associated with high color fastness and stability.

Naphthols, another historic product line for the firm, remain relevant due to their ability to form insoluble pigments with strong fastness characteristics. The company states it was first in India to introduce the pigment-grade Naphthol AS-CL variety and continues to manufacture multiple grades for pigment producers.

Partnerships and New Product Families

In recent years, Anar Chemicals has expanded into the flame-retardant space through a partnership with Switzerland-based MCA Technologies GmbH. Under a licensing agreement, the company manufactures and markets PPM Triazine, a halogen-free flame retardant (HFFR) used in engineering plastics, electrical components, textiles, and coatings. The joint venture, Anar Mcat Advanced Electronic Chemicals Pvt. Ltd., is part of the company’s push toward environmentally safer additives and specialty materials aligned with global sustainability trends.

The PPM Triazine product line is positioned as a low-smoke, high-thermal-stability alternative to traditional flame retardants, which often contain halogenated compounds now restricted in several regions.

Export Recognition and Compliance Milestones

In 2024, the company launched an Outsourcing and Procurement Solutions division in the United States, signaling an effort to expand its international supply-chain reach. It has also been recognized as a Two-Star Export House by the Government of India, a designation typically awarded to companies with consistent export performance.

Additionally, Anar Chemicals reports receiving a Silver sustainability rating from EcoVadis, a global ESG assessment platform, and holds an AEO T2 certification from Indian Customs status that typically provides logistical advantages in cross-border trade.

Leadership and Workforce Expertise

While the company’s founding brothers continue to lead the organization. Anar Chemicals highlights a senior management team with decades of experience in manufacturing, operations, sales, environment systems, and finance. Many of its managers and technical leads have more than 20 to 30 years of service in the industry, reflecting a workforce heavily built on long-term retention.

Operating in a Competitive and Evolving Industry

India’s specialty chemicals market has been expanding steadily, driven by factors such as global supply-chain diversification, rising domestic consumption, and stricter safety standards. However, the industry is also navigating pressures including raw-material volatility, energy costs, environmental compliance challenges, and competition from multinational suppliers.

Companies like Anar Chemicals, operating in narrower, technically demanding product categories, are attempting to differentiate themselves through reliability, sustainability, and custom formulation capabilities rather than scale alone.

As global regulatory frameworks evolve particularly around dyes, chemicals used in fuels, and halogen-containing flame retardants Indian manufacturers will likely face increased scrutiny but also new opportunities. For firms positioned in the niche-specialty segment, the next phase of growth may be shaped by their ability to innovate while aligning with international environmental and safety expectations.

Disclaimer: The above press release comes to you under an arrangement with VMPL. Business Upturn takes no editorial responsibility for the same.