COVID-19 PRODUCTION SUSPENSION HAMPERING TIMBER EXPORTS
Date: 2021-08-30
News Type: Marketing News
Suspension of production at local wood processing enterprises due to the COVID-19 pandemic is having
effects on exports, according to the Việt Nam Timber and Forest Product Association (VIFOREST).
Many enterprises processing and exporting furniture and handicrafts under the HCM City Fine Arts and
Woodworking Association (HAWA) had received orders from foreign importers until the end of 2021, said
the association Vice Chairman Nguyễn Chánh Phương.
Nguyễn Văn Sang, director of the Việt Products Import-Export Joint Stock Company (Viet Products), said that
the company had a number of new customers in the US market, leading to an increase in export orders in 2021
of 30 percent year on year.
This year, the Đức Thành Wood Joint Stock Company, a large producer of wooden home products and children
toys, had set an export target of US$17 million, an increase of 15 percent year on year. However, by the end of
February it had completed nearly 50 percent of its goal, said Nguyễn Thị Ngọc Diệp, the company's deputy general
director.
The pandemic had made people in other countries stay at home and had a greater need to shop for home products,
said Diệp, adding that supply chains from China had broken so the customers had moved to Việt Nam.
In addition, some large buyers had increased orders for Vietnamese enterprises due to good product quality, she said.
However, the pandemic has caused wood processing and export enterprises to face stagnation in production and delivery
because 65 percent of workers in this industry have been laid off due to the pandemic, according to VIFOREST.
The southern key region had 265 wood processing enterprises with a total of 119,300 employees before applying social
distancing. However, only 141 enterprises are now in operation, with 30,700 employees.
HCM City, Đồng Nai, Bình Dương and Tây Ninh have had 134 wood processing enterprises suspend production due to
having COVID-19 cases or being unable to implement the “3 on-site” model, which involves on-site production, dining
and rest.
Businesses implementing the model have high costs due to the COVID-19 testing of thousands of employees.
Meanwhile, during the production process, enterprises still have to import materials, auxiliary materials, chemicals, packaging,
and other necessities and also implement import and export procedures at banks, customs, and seaports. Their staff faces a very
high risk of COVID-19 infection, the association said.
Therefore, VIFOREST has proposed that the Government allows the association and the businesses to buy COVID-19 vaccines and
give free vaccinations to workers.
In addition, it said the Government needed to give financial support to wood processing businesses. The support includes
reduction or delay in paying corporate income tax and other kinds of taxes, delay of social insurance payments, and land rent
exemption for this year.
The Government also should allow enterprises to extend loan dues and restructure debts, it said.
The association has requested the Ministry of Industry and Trade to add raw materials of the wood processing industry to the list
of essential goods to avoid difficulty in transporting raw material for production.
According to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Việt Nam exported US$10.3 billion of timber, wood, and forest
products in the first seven months, a year-on-year increase of 55 percent.
Of the figure, timber and wood products raked in US$9.6 billion, up 55 percent on the same period of last year.
The major export markets of Việt Nam's wood and forest products in the first seven months included the US, Japan, China, the EU
and South Korea, accounting for over 90 percent of the total export value.
The largest export market was the US with US$5 billion, up nearly 94 percent year on year. Other large markets were China,
US$814 million, up 27 percent; Japan, US$704 million, up 17.2 percent; and South Korea, US$453 million, up 12.8 percent.
Việt Nam surpassed China as the largest supplier of bedroom furniture to the US. The export value of bedroom furniture to
the US reached US$991.4 million, up 69.8 percent year on year.
Meanwhile, the export of Việt Nam’s wood to France and wider Europe has ample room for growth.
Việt Nam is currently the sixth-largest provider of wooden furniture in France, but only makes up 4.5 percent of the European nation’s
total import values.
Experts forecast that Việt Nam’s timber and wood products exports to Europe would surge in the latter half of 2021. By that time, COVID-19
is expected to be brought under control and European countries are projected to loosen restriction measures and facilitate trade flows.
The recovery of the European economy and the European Union – Việt Nam Free Trade Agreement will be the driving forces for Việt Nam's export
of timber and wood products to this market.
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