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Japan Wood Products Prices

16-31th August 2006


Japan Wood Products Prices

Dollar Exchange Rates of  31th Aug. 2006

Japan Yen 117.25

Reports From Japan
Plywood supply and imports decline again
Total volume of plywood supply was 645,000 m3 in June, down 1.8% from May and 3.1% from June last year. Domestic plywood supply surged 9.2% to 280,000 m3 while imports declined 8.8% to 364,000 m3. By import source, 192,000 m3 came from Malaysia (down 12.6%)
and 111,000 m3 from Indonesia (down 1.2%). Plywood supply from Indonesia is expected to be stable in August-September due to a slight improvement of log production in the country since mid-July. Meanwhile, imports from Malaysia are not expected to increase at least through late October.

Plantation log plywood set to gain ground
In a recent outlook of Japan’s plywood supply, Hideyoshi Kawamura, Head of Itochu Kenzai Corporation’s Wood Materials Division, predicted that the use of plantation timber for plywood manufacturing would expand in Indonesia and Malaysia from 2010.

Mr. Kawamura said Indonesia was expected to manufacture 2-2.5 million m³ of plywood in 2006 (down from 4 million m³ in 2005), of which 50% (about 1.1 million m³) would be exported to Japan (down from 1.85 million m³ in 2005). Out of Indonesia’s 67-68 JAS certified plywood factories, only about 20 factories would be manufacturing products for Japan. The supply of
Indonesian plywood products to Japan had been rapidly shrinking, particularly 6-12mm plywood. Mr. Kawamura indicated that Japan’s annual demand for floor base plywood was about 1 million m³. Thus, Indonesian plywood factories had shifted focus to this product at the expense of concrete-form panels. Mr. Kawamura suggested the use of substitutes such as softwood plywood to counter the shortage of these panels.

With respect to Malaysia, Mr. Kawamura informed that plywood factories were installing new equipment in spite of log shortages. He predicted that Malaysia would export to Japan about 2.5 million m³ this year. Malaysia was expected to begin logging plantation forests in 2010 for
the production of plywood.

Concerning China, Mr. Kawamura predicted the country would export 7-10 million m³ to the world, of which 700,000 m³ would be bound for Japan. China was estimated to have about 500 plywood and 500 board factories. Most Chinese plywood was targeting the Japanese packing industry, but increasingly more factories were being JAS certified while quality had been
improving rapidly. Mr. Kawamura believed that the supply of Chinese plywood would continue to grow in Japan and was set to approach the 1 million m³ level in the near future from just 403,000 m3 in 2005. China’s competitiveness lies mainly in cheap processing and raw material costs. Poplar logs cost only 900 yuan per m³ ($117-120 per m³) while processed boards stand at 1,150
yuan per m³ ($150 per m³). Poplar grows quickly, reaches a diameter of 35 cm in just 5 years and can be logged in 7-8 years.

With regards to Japan’s plywood manufacturing, Mr. Kawamura estimated that lauan plywood production would be about 900,000 m³ while softwood plywood production would reach 2.4-2.5 million m³ in 2006. He indicated that thin and medium thick plywood would be eventually substituted by MDF and particle boards within 1-2 years. He also foresaw the substitution of lauan concrete panels by softwood plywood. However, he said that the supply of softwood raw material from Russia could become unstable due to the heightening of environmental and nationalist concerns in that country. This and the acute shortage of tropical logs would make
plantation forests the main source of raw materials for the manufacturing of plywood in 3-4 years, according to Mr. Kawamura. The supply and demand of engineered products such as LVL, compound plywood and OSB would most likely increase further in Japan in the future. 

Seihoku Group acquires Ofunato Plywood
Kita Nihon Plywood of the Seihoku Group bought Ofunato Plywood on 1 August 2006. Ofunato Plywood manufactured tropical hardwood plywood with thickness of 5.5, 9 and 12mm for the house building sector. Its monthly production was 80,000 sheets of 12mm 3x6 base. It consumed 2,500-3,000 m3 of logs from Solomon Island and Sabah, Malaysia and had annual sales of about ¥1 billion. Ofunato Plywood was having difficulties securing steady supply of tropical logs and facing reduced profitability due to growing costs. Seihoku Group said Ofunato Plywood would continue manufacturing tropical plywood while undergoing modernization.

 

 


Abbreviations

LM        Loyale Merchant, a grade of log parcel  Cu.m         Cubic Metre
QS         Qualite Superieure    Koku         0.278 Cu.m or 120BF
CI          Choix Industriel                                                       FFR            French Franc
CE         Choix Economique                                                        SQ              Sawmill Quality
CS         Choix Supplimentaire      SSQ            Select Sawmill Quality
FOB      Free-on-Board     FAS            Sawnwood Grade First and
KD        Kiln Dry                               Second 
AD        Air Dry        WBP           Water and Boil Proof
Boule    A Log Sawn Through and Through MR              Moisture Resistant
              the boards from one log are bundled                      pc         per piece      
              together                      ea                each      
BB/CC  Plywood grades. Letter(s) on the left indicate face veneer(s), those on the right backing veneer(s). Veneer grade decreases in order B, BB, C, CC, etc. MBF           1000 Board Feet          
              Plywood   MDF           Medium Density Fibreboard
BF         Board Foot F.CFA         CFA Franc        
Sq.Ft     Square Foot  PHND             Pin hole no defect grade
Hoppus ton     1.8 cubic metres              Price has moved up or down

Source: ITTO'  Tropical Timber Market Report


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