The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Wool prices sheared to the bone by coronaviru­s crisis

Effect on producers will be severe for up to 18 months, says marketing body

- GEMMA MACKENZIE

Wool prices will be severely impacted by the Covid-19 crisis for the next 12-18 months, warns British Wool.

The wool marketing body, which is owned by approximat­ely 40,000 sheep farmers across the UK, says the coronaviru­s pandemic has had a significan­t impact on global demand.

The organisati­on’s chief executive, Joe Farren, said British Wool experience­d reduced demand for wool from the Chinese market in January. Thereafter, the global market for wool from cross-bred sheep slowed significan­tly in February, and it has been shut since March.

Mr Farren said the period between February and May was usually the busiest selling period of the year, and as a result of market closures the body has around an extra 7 million kg of unsold wool from 2019, on top of 3m kg of wool normally handled at this time of year.

He said: “The severe, hopefully shortterm, drop in demand for wool products coupled with the huge global overhang in cross-bred wool stocks from the 2019 season is likely to severely impact prices for the next 12-18 months.

“It will also make our longer term objective of reposition­ing British Wool as a premium product more challengin­g.

“However, finding new demand for our wool in China at attractive prices will be a key driver of the early stages of recovery in British Wool prices.

“We must be more determined than ever in this objective.”

He said British Wool’s depots and collection­s sites were ready to start receiving wool, and protocols are in place to ensure the safety of producers and British Wool staff.

The National Sheep Associatio­n welcomed confirmati­on that depots and collection sites were open for business.

The associatio­n’s chief executive, Phil Stocker, said: “With so much uncertaint­y generally, we welcome that we are in a situation where shearing gangs can operate and wool can be moved.

“However, the news of the carryover of 10m kg, nearly a third of British Wool’s annual clip, is less welcome, although the UK is not alone in this.

“Fortunatel­y, most British sheep farmers are used to wool covering shearing and handling costs and often not a lot more, with few farmers relying on wool values for a living.”

 ??  ?? Bags of wool are building up at the British Wool depot, much of it unsold from 2019.
Bags of wool are building up at the British Wool depot, much of it unsold from 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom