Title: The Global Natural Fibre Economy
1The Global Natural Fibre Economy
- trends, issues and challenges
Adam Prakash Secretary Intergovernmental Groups
on Hard Fibres and on Jute, Kenaf and Allied
Fibres Trade and Markets Division (ESTM) FAO of
the United Nations
2Outline
- Economic importance of natural fibres
- Trends in global production and trade
- Why policies matter
- Synthetic versus natural fibres
- Expanding and diversifying markets
- International action plan
3Economic importance of natural fibres
- Natural fibres sector, worth over US40 billion
annually to the worlds producers - Majority of whom are situated in developing
countries - Cultivated as a cash crop, the sector generates
as much as US20 billion in export revenues
4Economic importance of natural fibres
- In Asia, cotton is small holder crop and a major
source of income of some 100 million rural
households - In Sub-Saharan Africa, cotton grown on 2 million
small farms. 10 million people work in the
region's cotton sector, and raw cotton makes up
about 50 of exports from Benin, Burkina Faso,
Chad, Mali and Togo
5Economic importance of natural fibres
- In India and Bangladesh, 4 million marginal
farmers earn their living and support 20
million dependents from the cultivation of jute - About 1 million workers are employed in the silk
sector in China. Sericulture provides income for
700 000 households in India, and 20 000 weaving
families in Thailand - Sisal is important to rural poor communities of
30 million people in Brazil
6Outline
- Economic importance of natural fibres
- Trends in global production and trade
- Why policies matter
- Synthetic versus natural fibres
- Expanding and diversifying markets
- International action plan
7Production Trends
- steady growth in global natural fibre output...
8Production Trends
- ...but masks contrasting production trends among
the different fibres
9Production Zones
Cotton
10Production Zones
Sisal
11Production Zones
Jute
12Production Zones
Coir
13Production Zones
Abaca and Ramie
14Production Zones
Flax and Hemp
15Production Zones
Silk
16Trends in Trade
- volatile growth around a steady trend in global
natural fibre exports mirroring trend in
production...
17Trends in Trade
- ... but again divergent paths among the
individual fibres
18Trends in Trade
- Share of export revenue falling for developing
countries export earnings are characterised by
marked volatility. In recent years industrialised
countries have witnessed much higher growth in
revenues than developing countries
19Outline
- Economic importance of natural fibres
- Trends in global production and trade
- Why policies matter
- Synthetic versus natural fibres
- Expanding and diversifying markets
- International action plan
20Policies matter
WTO aims to establish a fair and
market-oriented agricultural trading system...
through substantial progressive reductions in
agricultural support and protection.
- ...but, natural fibre sectors have had a long
legacy of targeted policy intervention, and this
is continuing today
- Some of the largest agricultural exporters
competed on the basis their governments ability
to subsidise production and exports while
limiting access to their markets for products
from lower-cost suppliers - Fibre producers in the vast majority of
developing countries, are forced to compete with
the treasuries of the worlds richest countries
in export markets and in their home markets
21Policies matter
- Widely accepted the subsidies maintain cotton
production at otherwise unprofitable levels in
industrialized countries - Current levels of EU production could be imported
at one-third of the cost of production
- In the US, the cost of cotton subsidies in some
years is greater than the total value of exports - Up to 70 of US cotton production is exported
(40 of world exports versus 17 in 1970).
Excess supplies induced by subsidies depress
world market prices - While good news for consumers, cotton subsidies
thwart efforts in developing countries with a
natural advantage in cotton to supply the world
on a level playing field. Foregone employment and
export revenues, and the associated multiplier
effects, run into billions of dollars.
22Policies matter
- Market access is also a contentious issue. Ad
valorem and specific import tariffs are
extensively employed to protect domestic fibre
markets and so to are quotas
- Natural fibres present themselves as a classic
example of the tariff escalation controversy
where importing countries protect processing
industries by levying lower tariff rates on raw
material imports and higher duties on processed
products. - Tariff escalation can therefore keep countries
trapped as raw material providers by preventing
them from diversifying their export base.
23Outline
- Economic importance of natural fibres
- Trends in global production and trade
- Why policies matter
- Synthetic versus natural fibres
- Expanding and diversifying markets
- International action plan
24Synthetic versus Natural Fibres
- Global fibre end-use has risen 2.5 fold in the
last 40 yrs. But the evolution of natural and
synthetic demand has been markedly different
Synthetic fibre utilisation tripled while natural
fibre demand a moderate 70 increase
25Synthetic versus Natural Fibres
- Derived from fossil fuels, numerous synthetic
fibres have particular characteristics that are
unmatched by natural fibres - Synthetic fibres are almost always mass-produced,
giving rise to economies of scale which ordinary
farmers cannot possibly achieve even through
mechanised agricultural cultivation practices
- Difficult to match the power of the multinational
petro-chemical firms in marketing - Fierce competition for agricultural land and
resources by food and bio-fuel sectors has led to
marginalization of fibre crops
26Synthetic versus Natural Fibres
- The demand for natural fibres is also sensitive
to changes in own prices, the prices of competing
natural fibres and of course synthetic
substitutes - But income is by far the most important
stimulant. Studies show that for every 1 fall
(rise) in income, fibre demand contracts
(expands) between 1 to 2 - Responsiveness is much higher than for many other
commodities, including food, other raw materials
and energy
27Synthetic versus Natural Fibres
- The physiology of the fibre and its cost become
more important issues, opening natural fibres to
a multitude of other competitive forces.
28Synthetic versus Natural Fibres
- Many believed that competition from synthetics
would erode the market for natural fibres in to
insignificance. - The blending of natural fibres with synthetic
counterparts, has boosted natural fibre demand - Synthetics are cheaper to produce, but evidence
of a strong perception by consumers that certain
products are superior if they are made with
natural fibres and are willing to pay a premium - Issues relating to sustainability and the
environment have opened natural fibres to wide
array of other applications -
29Expanding and diversifying markets
Traditional Market Paradigm for Natural Fibres
30Expanding and diversifying markets
New Market Paradigm for Natural Fibres
31Expanding and diversifying markets
- As a renewable resource, natural fibres can play
a key role in the emerging green economy - One tonne of polypropylene emits into the
atmosphere more than 3 tonnes of carbon dioxide,
the main greenhouse gas responsible for global
warming - While one tonne of jute fibre requires 10 of the
energy used for the production of one tonne of
synthetic fibres
32Expanding and diversifying markets
- While processing of some natural fibres can lead
to high levels of water pollutants, but they
consist mostly of biodegradable compounds, in
contrast to the persistent chemicals, including
heavy metals, released in the effluent from
synthetic fibre processing
- in the case of high-density polyethylene, 3
tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions for every
tonne of material burnt
- In contrast, a tonne of natural fibre like jute,
can absorb well over 2 tonnes of carbon, and, at
the end of their life cycle, they are 100
biodegradable
33Outline
- Economic importance of natural fibres
- Trends in global production and trade
- Why policies matter
- Synthetic versus natural fibres
- Expanding and diversifying markets
- International action plan
34International Action Plan
- Environmental considerations are increasingly
influencing consumption patterns in industrial
sectors and Governments throughout the world are
taking measures to discourage industry from
placing external costs on the community - Therefore, if the life-cycle costs associated
with synthetic fibres were internalised, by way
of a tax, natural fibres would undoubtedly attain
a greater cost advantage over synthetic products - Remove policy distortions
- Launching a Fibre Mark to promote sustainable,
pro-environment and responsible choices in the
market place
35International Action Plan
Joint Meeting of the 35th Session of the
Intergovernmental Group on Hard Fibres and the
37th Session of the Intergovernmental Group on
Jute, Kenaf and Allied Fibres Pasay City,
Philippines, 20/10/2009 - 22/10/2009