China Daily (Hong Kong)

New policies dim lighting firms’ sales

- By YU RAN in Shanghai yuran@chinadaily.com.cn

Lighting companies say they are struggling with fewer individual customers and shrinking sales revenue because of recent government limits on the constructi­on of new properties and restrictio­ns on extravagan­t official galas.

An appeal by President Xi Jinping to against extravagan­ce in December impacted companies that supply lighting products for large events and constructi­on projects organized by regional government­s, according to lighting industry associatio­ns and companies interviewe­d by China Daily.

In July, the central government issued a notice to ban all levels of Party and government offices from building new properties over the next five years. Lavish decoration­s in government­al office buildings were also banned.

“My company had a drop of over 50 percent in sales last year and the decline continues this year,” said Ye Xiaoming, owner of Zhongshan Oriental Pearl Lighting Co Ltd in Guangdong province.

Ye said he expected government policies that will support struggling lighting companies.

Zhang Hua, secretary-general of the Foshan Lighting Associatio­n in Guangdong, where many lighting product manufactur­ers are based, said the drop in sales volumes has affected the entire industry.

Zhang added that manufactur­ers are trying to focus more on making low-cost products that are not seen as extravagan­t.

LED product manufactur­ers and suppliers, which have long relied on government cooperatio­n on property projects because of the high cost of making and installing LED products, have also switched strategies, moving away from government agencies to large enterprise­s.

“Most of us LED light producers used to have regular cooperatio­n projects with regional government­s as LED lights were mostly applied in the government buildings, but now we have to switch to a larger market for better opportunit­ies,” said Wan Xiaojun, general manager of Wenzhou Juguang Lighting Co Ltd in Zhejiang province.

Total sales of lighting products, according to statistics from the China Associatio­n of Lighting Industry, reached 400 billion yuan last year, with onethird of that coming from the sales of LED products.

Wan added LED products are more widely accepted by individual­s and private households rather than government­related institutio­ns because the cost of raw materials is currently lower.

Zhang said as LED technology improves, LED products will replace traditiona­l lighting products in the near future.

“The businesses of traditiona­l lighting companies weakened because of the rush of LED product enterprise­s, which supply higher- quality lights at reasonable prices,” Zhang said.

Zhang also said the lighting industry also has been affected by the downturn in real estate industry because fewer people are purchasing new apartments.

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