시장보고서
상품코드
1864788

에너지 효율적 건축자재 시장 : 재료 유형별, 최종 용도별, 기술별, 판매 채널별, 인증별 - 세계 예측(2025-2032년)

Energy-efficient Building Materials Market by Material Type, End Use, Technology, Sales Channel, Certification - Global Forecast 2025-2032

발행일: | 리서치사: 360iResearch | 페이지 정보: 영문 199 Pages | 배송안내 : 1-2일 (영업일 기준)

    
    
    




■ 보고서에 따라 최신 정보로 업데이트하여 보내드립니다. 배송일정은 문의해 주시기 바랍니다.

에너지 효율적 건축자재 시장은 2032년까지 CAGR 10.64%로 1,538억 9,000만 달러 규모로 성장할 것으로 예측되고 있습니다.

주요 시장 통계
기준연도 2024년 685억 2,000만 달러
추정연도 2025년 757억 6,000만 달러
예측연도 2032년 1,538억 9,000만 달러
CAGR(%) 10.64%

현대의 지속가능성 및 자산 성능 전략에서 에너지 절약형 건축자재의 진화하는 역할에 대한 간결하고 권위 있는 발표

에너지 절약형 건축자재는 현대의 지속가능성, 탄력성, 비용 압박에 대한 건축 환경의 대응 방식을 재구성하고 있습니다. 재료과학의 발전과 더불어 인센티브 중심의 정책 프레임워크와 운영시 배출량 감축을 요구하는 이해관계자들의 요구가 증가함에 따라 단열재, 유리, 지붕 시스템, 통합 조명은 전체 건축 포트폴리오의 전략적 우선순위로 격상되었습니다. 소유자, 개발자 및 운영자가 수명주기 비용과 성능을 재평가함에 따라 재료 선택은 측정된 에너지 성능, 내장된 탄소 고려, 전기화 및 탈탄소화 경로에 대한 적응성에 의해 점점 더 많은 영향을 받고 있습니다.

입증된 성능, 통합 시스템 사고, 새로운 조달 모델이 건축 환경 전반에 걸쳐 건축자재 혁신과 사양 설정 관행을 어떻게 변화시키고 있는가?

에너지 절약형 건축자재 환경은 제품 개발, 사양 수립 방법, 조달 모델을 재정의하는 여러 가지 혁신적인 변화가 일어나고 있습니다. 첫째, 성능 검증과 수명주기 평가는 차별화 요소에서 필수 요건으로 전환되고 있습니다. 소유자 및 사양 개발자는 사용 중 성능을 검증하는 타사 데이터 및 임베디드 센서를 점점 더 많이 요구하고 있으며, 이는 연구개발 우선순위 및 인증 전략을 형성하고 있습니다. 이와 함께 통합 시스템 사고가 주목받고 있으며, 파사드, 단열재, 유리, 지붕, 조명은 고립된 제품 선택이 아닌 건물 전체의 성능에 기여하는 상호의존적인 요소로 평가되고 있습니다.

에너지 효율적 건축자재 부문공급망, 조달 결정, 경쟁적 포지셔닝에 대한 미국 관세 변경의 전략적, 운영적 영향 평가

2025년 미국 관세 환경은 에너지 절약 건축자재 부문의 국제 공급망, 조달 전략, 제품 경쟁에 새로운 복잡성을 더했습니다. 관세 조정은 조달 결정에 영향을 미치고, 제조업체와 유통업체는 비용 변동 완화 및 리드타임 유지를 위해 공급업체 거점 재평가, 물류 재구축, 지역내 제조를 모색하는 등 다양한 노력을 기울이고 있습니다. 이러한 움직임은 공급망 탄력성에 대한 관심을 다시 불러일으켰고, 기업은 정책 변동에 대한 노출을 관리하기 위해 공급업체 다변화, 니어쇼어링, 재고 버퍼 확보 등을 우선순위로 삼고 있습니다.

재료 유형, 최종 용도, 첨단 기술, 판매 채널 동향, 인증 획득 채널이 제품 우선순위 및 경쟁 우위를 형성하는 방법, 상세한 세분화 분석

인사이트를 통해 재료 유형, 최종 용도, 기술, 판매 채널, 인증 채널에 걸쳐 미묘한 기회와 위험 프로파일을 파악할 수 있습니다. 재료 유형에 따라 이해관계자들은 클래딩, 단열재, 조명 시스템, 루핑 솔루션, 실란트, 창문이 각각 열 성능과 내구성에 다르게 기여한다는 점을 고려해야 합니다. 단열재의 경우, 미네랄울, 반사 단열재, 경질 폼의 선택은 수분 관리, 방화 성능, 시공의 복잡성에 영향을 미칩니다. 한편, 창문의 선택인 단열 유리, 저방사선 코팅 유리, 삼중 유리와 같은 창문의 선택은 열관류율과 채광성의 트레이드 오프가 다릅니다. 이러한 차이로 인해 개보수 공사와 신축 공사에 적합한 제품이 달라지며, 유지관리 계획과 거주자의 쾌적성에도 영향을 미칩니다.

목차

제1장 서문

제2장 조사 방법

제3장 개요

제4장 시장 개요

제5장 시장 인사이트

제6장 미국 관세의 누적 영향 2025

제7장 AI의 누적 영향 2025

제8장 에너지 효율적 건축자재 시장 : 재료 유형별

  • 외장재
  • 단열재
    • 미네랄울
    • 반사 단열재
    • 경질 발포 단열재
  • 조명 시스템
  • 지붕재 솔루션
  • 실란트
    • 복층 유리
    • 저방사율 코팅 유리
    • 삼중 유리

제9장 에너지 효율적 건축자재 시장 : 최종 용도별

  • 상용
  • 산업용
  • 공공 시설용
  • 주택

제10장 에너지 효율적 건축자재 시장 : 기술별

  • 에어로젤 단열재
  • 쿨 루프 코팅
  • 저에너지 유리
  • 상변화물질
  • 진공 단열 패널

제11장 에너지 효율적 건축자재 시장 : 판매 채널별

  • 직접 판매
  • 도매업체
  • 온라인 소매

제12장 에너지 효율적 건축자재 시장 : 인증별

  • 건축 연구소 환경 평가법(BRE EA)
  • 에너지 스타
  • 에너지와 환경 설계에서의 리더십
  • 패시브 하우스

제13장 에너지 효율적 건축자재 시장 : 지역별

  • 아메리카
    • 북미
    • 라틴아메리카
  • 유럽, 중동 및 아프리카
    • 유럽
    • 중동
    • 아프리카
  • 아시아태평양

제14장 에너지 효율적 건축자재 시장 : 그룹별

  • ASEAN
  • GCC
  • EU
  • BRICS
  • G7
  • NATO

제15장 에너지 효율적 건축자재 시장 : 국가별

  • 미국
  • 캐나다
  • 멕시코
  • 브라질
  • 영국
  • 독일
  • 프랑스
  • 러시아
  • 이탈리아
  • 스페인
  • 중국
  • 인도
  • 일본
  • 호주
  • 한국

제16장 경쟁 구도

  • 시장 점유율 분석, 2024년
  • FPNV 포지셔닝 매트릭스, 2024년
  • 경쟁 분석
    • Saint-Gobain S.A.
    • Kingspan Group plc
    • BASF SE
    • Owens Corning Inc.
    • Rockwool International A/S
    • Dow Inc.
    • Carlisle Companies Incorporated
    • Armstrong World Industries, Inc.
    • RPM International Inc.
    • Johnson Controls International plc
KSA 25.12.12

The Energy-efficient Building Materials Market is projected to grow by USD 153.89 billion at a CAGR of 10.64% by 2032.

KEY MARKET STATISTICS
Base Year [2024] USD 68.52 billion
Estimated Year [2025] USD 75.76 billion
Forecast Year [2032] USD 153.89 billion
CAGR (%) 10.64%

A concise and authoritative introduction to the evolving role of energy-efficient building materials in contemporary sustainability and asset performance strategies

Energy-efficient building materials are reshaping how the built environment responds to contemporary sustainability, resilience, and cost pressures. Advances in material science, coupled with incentive-driven policy frameworks and growing demand from stakeholders for lower operational emissions, have elevated insulation, glazing, roofing systems, and integrated lighting to strategic priorities across building portfolios. As owners, developers, and operators reassess lifecycle costs and performance, material selection is increasingly driven by measured energy performance, embodied carbon considerations, and adaptability to electrification and decarbonization pathways.

This introduction synthesizes the context in which manufacturers, specifiers, and investors are operating: an era where product-level performance must align with whole-building outcomes and where certification frameworks and digital modeling tools influence procurement and specification. The interaction between product innovation and regulatory signals is accelerating adoption of higher-performance solutions, while supply chain dynamics and cost pressures continue to shape near-term decisions. Consequently, stakeholders now evaluate materials not solely on unit cost but on durability, installation efficiency, maintenance implications, and contribution to broader net-zero goals.

In practical terms, decision-makers are prioritizing materials that deliver verifiable reductions in heating, cooling, and lighting loads, minimize thermal bridging, and integrate with controls and renewable generation. The next sections build on this foundation by examining disruptive shifts, regulatory impacts, segmentation-driven strategies, regional nuances, competitive moves, and clear recommendations that enable leaders to convert these trends into defensible strategies.

How verified performance, integrated system thinking, and emergent procurement models are transforming material innovation and specification practices across the built environment

The landscape for energy-efficient building materials is experiencing several transformative shifts that are redefining product development, specification practices, and procurement models. First, performance verification and lifecycle assessment are moving from optional differentiators to table-stakes attributes; owners and specifiers increasingly demand third-party data and embedded sensors that validate in-use performance, which in turn shapes R&D priorities and certification strategies. Alongside this, integrated systems thinking is gaining traction, with facade, insulation, glazing, roofing, and lighting evaluated as interdependent contributors to overall building performance rather than as isolated product decisions.

Second, material innovation is accelerating at the intersection of advanced insulation technologies, smart glazing, and thermally adaptive coatings, enabling designers to achieve higher thermal comfort and lower energy intensity in both retrofit and new-build contexts. Third, procurement models are evolving: performance-based contracts and supplier partnerships geared toward whole-life outcomes are replacing transactional supply relationships. This shift encourages manufacturers to offer bundled solutions, extended warranties, and installation training to secure long-term value capture.

Fourth, regulatory and voluntary certification regimes are tightening, driving earlier integration of high-performance materials into design processes and increasing demand for compliance-ready products. Finally, digital design and analytics tools, such as high-fidelity energy modeling and digital twins, are being used to quantify material impacts at scale, reduce specification uncertainty, and enable more agile iteration between manufacturers and design teams. Together, these shifts are creating an environment where innovation, verification, and collaborative delivery models determine market leadership.

Assessing the strategic and operational effects of U.S. tariff changes on supply chains, sourcing decisions, and competitive positioning within energy-efficient building materials

The United States tariff environment in 2025 introduced an added layer of complexity for international supply chains, procurement strategies, and product competitiveness within the energy-efficient building materials sector. Tariff adjustments have influenced sourcing decisions, prompting manufacturers and distributors to reassess supplier footprints, reconfigure logistics, and explore regional manufacturing to mitigate cost volatility and preserve lead times. These moves have generated a renewed focus on supply chain resilience, with companies prioritizing supplier diversification, nearshoring, and inventory buffers to manage exposure to policy shifts.

At the product level, tariff-driven input cost pressures have accelerated supplier consolidation in certain material categories, particularly where raw material inputs are concentrated geographically. To preserve margin and maintain competitive pricing, producers have prioritized process and yield improvements, invested in automation for consistent quality and lower labor dependencies, and negotiated long-term agreements with raw material providers. In parallel, some manufacturers have rebalanced product portfolios toward higher-value, performance-differentiated offerings that can better withstand pricing pressure by competing on demonstrable lifecycle benefits rather than commodity pricing alone.

For project teams and specifiers, tariffs have reinforced the importance of early procurement planning and total-cost-of-ownership analysis. Developers and contractors now place higher value on suppliers that can guarantee delivery windows, provide transparent cost breakdowns, and demonstrate installation efficiencies that lower overall project risk. Regulatory and incentive programs that reward energy performance have helped mute some near-term cost effects by preserving demand for high-performance materials, but the net result is a strategic landscape in which supply chain strategy, product differentiation, and service-oriented commercial models are decisive for competitiveness.

In-depth segmentation insights that reveal how material type, end use, advanced technologies, sales channel dynamics, and certification pathways shape product prioritization and competitive advantage

Segmentation-driven insights uncover nuanced opportunities and risk profiles across material types, end uses, technologies, sales channels, and certification pathways. Based on Material Type, stakeholders must consider how Cladding, Insulation, Lighting Systems, Roofing Solutions, Sealants, and Windows each contribute differently to thermal performance and durability; within Insulation, choices among Mineral Wool, Reflective Insulation, and Rigid Foam affect moisture management, fire performance, and installation complexity, while Windows options such as Double Pane Glass, Low Energy Coated Glass, and Triple Pane Glass vary in thermal transmittance and daylighting trade-offs. These distinctions dictate which products perform best in retrofit scenarios versus new construction and influence maintenance schedules and occupant comfort outcomes.

Based on End Use, performance priorities shift between Commercial, Industrial, Institutional, and Residential applications, where thermal mass considerations, operational hours, and occupant density alter the return on performance attributes and determine appropriate warranty and service models. Institutional projects, for example, place premium value on durability and regulatory compliance, whereas residential markets prioritize installation speed, aesthetics, and cost-effectiveness. Based on Technology, the adoption curve differs for advanced solutions such as Aerogel Insulation, Cool Roof Coatings, Low Energy Glass, Phase Change Materials, and Vacuum Insulation Panels; technologies offering compact form factors or unique retrofitting advantages tend to see early adoption in constrained envelope situations.

Based on Sales Channel, direct sales, distributors, and online retail each shape procurement timelines and margin structures; direct sales enable closer specification alignment and lifecycle service, distributors offer reach and inventory flexibility, and online channels are accelerating smaller-scale projects and aftermarket purchases. Based on Certification, alignment with frameworks such as Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Method, Energy Star, Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, and Passive House drives product acceptance in projects seeking demonstrable sustainability credentials and often expedites approval within specification processes. Combining these segmentation lenses reveals where investment in product adaptation, partner ecosystems, and certification pathways will yield the greatest competitive advantage.

Critical regional insights showing how Americas, Europe Middle East & Africa, and Asia-Pacific market dynamics drive differentiated demand and strategic approaches

Regional dynamics materially influence technology adoption, regulation, supply chain resilience, and customer preferences across the Americas, Europe, Middle East & Africa, and Asia-Pacific. In the Americas, policy incentives, aging building stock, and active retrofit markets are driving demand for high-performance insulation, energy-efficient windows, and integrated lighting solutions that can demonstrate quick operational gains and comply with tightening energy codes. The commercial and residential segments both show appetite for solutions that reduce operating costs and improve occupant comfort, while manufacturers focus on scalable installation practices to serve geographically dispersed projects.

In Europe, Middle East & Africa, regulatory rigor, ambitious decarbonization targets, and established certification schemes accelerate uptake of low-energy glass, advanced insulation materials, and facade systems designed for both thermal performance and embodied carbon reduction. Energy performance requirements and urban retrofit programs create opportunities for modular, low-disruption technologies and for products that can meet strict fire and safety standards. Suppliers in this region also face heightened scrutiny on supply chain traceability and material provenance, prompting investment in transparent sourcing and compliance documentation.

In the Asia-Pacific region, rapid urbanization, intensive construction activity, and diverse climatic conditions create demand for scalable, cost-effective energy-efficient solutions across new construction and retrofit markets. Manufacturers in the region are pursuing localized production to reduce lead times and align product specifications with variable energy codes, while innovations in materials and coatings are optimized to address humidity, solar heat gain, and high-intensity sunlight. Across all regions, regional nuances in procurement practices, incentive structures, and certification priorities require manufacturers and specifiers to tailor offerings and market approaches to local conditions.

Key competitive dynamics and company strategies revealing how innovation, service integration, and supply chain agility create market leadership in energy-efficient building materials

Competitive dynamics among manufacturers, material innovators, and service providers are increasingly defined by the ability to couple validated performance with scalable delivery models. Leading companies are investing in advanced R&D to develop next-generation insulation, glazing, and adaptive coatings that align with both energy performance targets and practical installation constraints. These firms also emphasize third-party testing, transparent lifecycle assessments, and field performance studies to support specification and to differentiate their products from commodity alternatives.

Strategically, companies that succeed tend to combine product innovation with enhanced service offerings, such as bundled installation, long-term performance guarantees, and digital tools that assist architects and contractors with specification and measurement. Partnerships between manufacturers and technology firms-especially those focused on sensors, controls, and building analytics-are enabling new value propositions where materials are part of integrated performance ecosystems. In market-facing activities, leaders prioritize channel diversity, establishing strong distributor networks while simultaneously expanding direct relationships with large developers and public-sector procurement authorities.

Operationally, agility in production footprint and supplier relationships is a competitive advantage amid tariff fluctuations and raw material volatility. Firms that invest in regional manufacturing capability, flexible production lines, and qualified installer networks reduce lead times and improve service reliability. Finally, companies that pursue credible certification pathways and maintain clear documentation of environmental and performance attributes achieve faster acceptance in high-specification projects and secure early wins in institutional and corporate sustainability programs.

Actionable recommendations for manufacturers, specifiers, and procurement teams to strengthen validation, resilience, certification alignment, and service-led business models

Industry leaders should pursue a pragmatic blend of product differentiation, supply chain resilience, and market engagement to capitalize on the energy-efficient building materials opportunity. First, prioritize validated performance: invest in third-party testing, field trials, and lifecycle assessments that quantify real-world benefits and support claims in procurement contexts. Ensuring that products are accompanied by robust installation guidance and training programs will reduce performance variance and protect reputations.

Second, strengthen supply chain resilience through supplier diversification, nearshoring where feasible, and strategic inventory planning. These measures mitigate exposure to policy shocks and shipping disruptions and enable more consistent delivery to large projects. Third, align product portfolios with end-use requirements and certification expectations by tailoring offerings for commercial, institutional, residential, and industrial segments and by pursuing certifications that unlock project pipelines.

Fourth, develop service-led business models that couple products with performance guarantees, monitoring services, and retrospective analytics; such models increase customer lifetime value and create recurring revenue opportunities. Fifth, cultivate collaborative relationships with architects, contractors, and energy modelers to embed product benefits early in design processes and to facilitate specification. Finally, invest in digital tools and data analytics to demonstrate in-use performance, provide better customer support, and inform iterative product improvements. Taken together, these actions create defensible differentiation and enable scalable adoption across diverse projects and geographies.

A rigorous and transparent research methodology combining stakeholder interviews, technical literature review, case studies, and scenario analysis to ensure robust and actionable insights

This research analysis synthesizes multiple qualitative and quantitative inputs to ensure rigorous findings and actionable recommendations. Primary research included structured interviews with industry stakeholders, including material manufacturers, architects, specification experts, procurement managers, and installation contractors, to capture frontline perspectives on performance priorities, procurement practices, and barriers to adoption. Secondary research encompassed peer-reviewed literature, standards and regulatory documentation, technical datasheets, and publicly available case studies to validate product performance claims and certification pathways.

Analytical methods combined thematic analysis of stakeholder interviews with cross-comparison of technology attributes, lifecycle considerations, and regional regulatory contexts. Case study analysis was used to illustrate real-world implementation challenges and success factors across new construction and retrofit scenarios. Scenario-based assessment helped evaluate strategic responses to supply chain disruptions and policy changes, while sensitivity checks ensured recommendations remain robust under varying procurement and pricing conditions.

Throughout the methodology, emphasis was placed on transparency of assumptions, triangulation of multiple data sources, and privileging documented field performance over theoretical laboratory claims. Limitations are acknowledged where proprietary project data could not be accessed; where relevant, gaps are noted to inform future research priorities and targeted primary data collection efforts.

Conclusive synthesis emphasizing the necessity of validated performance, integrated delivery models, and supply chain adaptability to realize building-level energy savings

Energy-efficient building materials are central to achieving durable reductions in operational energy use and to meeting evolving sustainability mandates. The convergence of advanced insulation technologies, high-performance glazing, adaptive roofing coatings, and integrated lighting solutions underscores a strategic pivot: materials must deliver demonstrable, verifiable outcomes at the building level while remaining practical to procure and install. The interplay between regulatory pressures, certification expectations, and buyer preferences continues to favor products that couple verified performance with low total cost of ownership and clear maintenance pathways.

Looking ahead, market competitiveness will be defined by the ability to integrate materials into broader performance ecosystems that include analytics, controls, and service offerings. Companies that invest in third-party validation, certification alignment, and regional supply chain adaptability will capture disproportionate value, particularly in institutional and large commercial projects. For specifiers and owners, early integration of high-performance materials into design and procurement processes, backed by robust performance documentation, will be the most reliable means of securing lifecycle energy and occupant comfort benefits.

In conclusion, the path to widespread adoption lies in marrying technological innovation with pragmatic delivery models, transparent performance evidence, and strategic partnerships across the construction value chain. Entities that embrace this holistic approach will be best positioned to translate material-level advances into measurable building-level outcomes and long-term competitive advantage.

Table of Contents

1. Preface

  • 1.1. Objectives of the Study
  • 1.2. Market Segmentation & Coverage
  • 1.3. Years Considered for the Study
  • 1.4. Currency & Pricing
  • 1.5. Language
  • 1.6. Stakeholders

2. Research Methodology

3. Executive Summary

4. Market Overview

5. Market Insights

  • 5.1. Adoption of biophilic design principles using natural thermal and acoustic insulating materials
  • 5.2. Rising demand for smart glazing systems with dynamic tinting and integrated photovoltaic cells for facade optimization
  • 5.3. Development of recycled foam insulating panels using ocean-bound plastic waste to reduce carbon footprint
  • 5.4. Increased use of 3D-printed concrete composites with embedded aerogel layers for enhanced thermal performance in building envelopes
  • 5.5. Scaling up mass timber cross-laminated timber structures for mid-rise buildings to improve construction speed and energy efficiency
  • 5.6. Integration of AI-driven energy management systems with adaptive HVAC panels for real-time building envelope adjustments
  • 5.7. Surge in adoption of vacuum insulation panels in retrofitting historic buildings to meet stricter energy codes while preserving architecture
  • 5.8. Advances in bio-based phase change materials encapsulated in wallboards for stabilizing indoor temperatures and reducing HVAC load

6. Cumulative Impact of United States Tariffs 2025

7. Cumulative Impact of Artificial Intelligence 2025

8. Energy-efficient Building Materials Market, by Material Type

  • 8.1. Cladding
  • 8.2. Insulation
    • 8.2.1. Mineral Wool
    • 8.2.2. Reflective Insulation
    • 8.2.3. Rigid Foam
  • 8.3. Lighting Systems
  • 8.4. Roofing Solutions
  • 8.5. Sealants
  • 8.6. Windows
    • 8.6.1. Double Pane Glass
    • 8.6.2. Low Energy Coated Glass
    • 8.6.3. Triple Pane Glass

9. Energy-efficient Building Materials Market, by End Use

  • 9.1. Commercial
  • 9.2. Industrial
  • 9.3. Institutional
  • 9.4. Residential

10. Energy-efficient Building Materials Market, by Technology

  • 10.1. Aerogel Insulation
  • 10.2. Cool Roof Coatings
  • 10.3. Low Energy Glass
  • 10.4. Phase Change Materials
  • 10.5. Vacuum Insulation Panels

11. Energy-efficient Building Materials Market, by Sales Channel

  • 11.1. Direct Sales
  • 11.2. Distributors
  • 11.3. Online Retail

12. Energy-efficient Building Materials Market, by Certification

  • 12.1. Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Method
  • 12.2. Energy Star
  • 12.3. Leadership In Energy And Environmental Design
  • 12.4. Passive House

13. Energy-efficient Building Materials Market, by Region

  • 13.1. Americas
    • 13.1.1. North America
    • 13.1.2. Latin America
  • 13.2. Europe, Middle East & Africa
    • 13.2.1. Europe
    • 13.2.2. Middle East
    • 13.2.3. Africa
  • 13.3. Asia-Pacific

14. Energy-efficient Building Materials Market, by Group

  • 14.1. ASEAN
  • 14.2. GCC
  • 14.3. European Union
  • 14.4. BRICS
  • 14.5. G7
  • 14.6. NATO

15. Energy-efficient Building Materials Market, by Country

  • 15.1. United States
  • 15.2. Canada
  • 15.3. Mexico
  • 15.4. Brazil
  • 15.5. United Kingdom
  • 15.6. Germany
  • 15.7. France
  • 15.8. Russia
  • 15.9. Italy
  • 15.10. Spain
  • 15.11. China
  • 15.12. India
  • 15.13. Japan
  • 15.14. Australia
  • 15.15. South Korea

16. Competitive Landscape

  • 16.1. Market Share Analysis, 2024
  • 16.2. FPNV Positioning Matrix, 2024
  • 16.3. Competitive Analysis
    • 16.3.1. Saint-Gobain S.A.
    • 16.3.2. Kingspan Group plc
    • 16.3.3. BASF SE
    • 16.3.4. Owens Corning Inc.
    • 16.3.5. Rockwool International A/S
    • 16.3.6. Dow Inc.
    • 16.3.7. Carlisle Companies Incorporated
    • 16.3.8. Armstrong World Industries, Inc.
    • 16.3.9. RPM International Inc.
    • 16.3.10. Johnson Controls International plc
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