Wool2Yarn Global

Page 16

industry news

China - not a typical year 2020

has been called the ‘unprecedented year’. It has been the toughest year so far for the entire world wool textile industry, and certainly not a typical one. China has not been spared. When the COVID-19 pandemic first took hold in Wuhan, China took extraordinary measures to lock down much of the country until early April. The national economy took a nose dive and this was at its lowest growth level in last 20 years. The wool textile pipeline was at a standstill for nearly 3 months. This devastating situation was further compounded by the trade war with the USA, with increased textile products tariffs into the US market. Robert Wang, China Manager for Australia Wool Testing Authority (AWTA) says: ‘The coronavirus in Europe and North America virtually stopped global trading. As a result more than half of the Chinese wool textile manufacturing capability was idle until May. A significant part of the workforce was laid off, factories were deserted, and shops were closed across the country. The GDP growth target set by the central government for 2020 was 6%, however, in April, the economists argued that this figure should be revised down to 1%. Furthermore, in June, the government announced that a fixed target for 2020 was no longer required. This shows the seriousness of the economic 14 | wool2yarnglobal 2020

By Robert Wang

performance in the first half this year. In April the Chinese government attempted a new initiative to encourage “internal economic circulation”. Trillions of dollars were injected into the domestic economy to boost commercial activities. With the easing of the pandemic and government assistance, from May onward the economy showed signs of revival. Although foreign trade has still been hurt badly, the domestic economy has come out of hibernation and is starting to grow again. China re-entered the Australian wool market in April and has been dominating purchases again. Given the withdrawal by other major Australian wool buying countries such as Italy and India, China has purchased more than 90% of Australian wool offered since June. The beginning of the new season, China continued to be the dominant buying power in the global wool market. On the other hand, global wool supply has hit the lowest

level in the last 80 years due to consecutive years of severe drought and devastating bushfires in Australia. Despite the dominance of Chinese buying in the Australian market, the actual quantity of raw wool intake by China has reduced sharply. Overall, because of the low demand, even with the historical low wool production, the EMI has fallen by more than 40% since the beginning of this year. With the deepening global economic crisis, it is almost certain that further deterioration in the wool textile industry is envisaged. Notwithstanding the partial economic recovery in China from April, the eventual normalisation will take much more time. The latest industry survey shows that consumers have become extremely cautious with their disposable income. There is a general lack of enthusiasm in the retail sector. Textile manufacturers therefore have gradually run out of steam. The lack of orders from retail has forced a large number of mills in China to close, which was reflected in the Australian wool auction rooms. The wool price index has fallen down below 1000 Australian cents since 2012. Unfortunately it will slide further. It may take at least another two years for the industry to fight its way back. The world is still in the middle of COVID-19, and there is no doubt that everyone has to bite the bullet. This is the reality that we all are facing today’.


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Articles inside

Latest in wool technology from Saurer, Tecnomeccanica, Coppa, Sant Andrea, AUTEFA, Prosino, Tomsic

34min
pages 144-164

Europa Wool

3min
pages 140-143

Building consumer awareness

2min
pages 138-139

British Wool in China

3min
pages 136-137

When scoured wool makes better sense

6min
pages 130-135

Consistent dye quality from one batch to the next

3min
pages 102-105

Profiles on leading Australian wool exporters

6min
pages 124-129

A fusion of tradition and innovation

7min
pages 108-113

A wool story: From chance to passion

2min
pages 106-107

Wool, Yarn and Beyond

27min
pages 84-97

Economical solution

3min
pages 98-100

The Sustainable Journey of Mohair

14min
pages 72-83

No Shortcuts to Mohair Tops Accreditation

2min
pages 70-71

Natural Fibres – where we are today

3min
pages 66-69

RWS tops a best seller

5min
pages 62-65

The magic is in the crimping

2min
pages 60-61

Mohair Yarns offers great flexibility

4min
pages 58-59

Wool integrity schemes on the rise

22min
pages 40-51

Uruguayan wool – get the full story

3min
pages 54-55

Environmental Tick of Approval

2min
pages 56-57

Broader sustainability guidelines

2min
pages 52-53

Risk and opportunity for wool in EU labelling

3min
pages 38-39

Spinning solutions for sustainability today

3min
pages 34-35

A hub for International Wool, Textile and Product Testing

4min
pages 36-37

Wool for Wellbeing in a Post-COVID World

3min
pages 30-33

Human capital key in good times and bad

3min
pages 26-27

Wool industry faces yet another battle

3min
pages 28-29

China in 2020 - not a typical year

3min
pages 16-17

Interview - Stuart McCullough AWI

4min
pages 20-21

Speaking with Pedro Otegui in Uruguay

1min
pages 24-25

The benefits of being a Woolmark licensee

3min
pages 22-23

An uncertain road ahead

7min
pages 12-15

Merino wool earns international certification

2min
pages 18-19
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