Pulp Mill Wood Costs in Brazil among World’s Lowest
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Pulp mills and sawmills in Brazil became more competitive in 2012, mostly thanks to a weakening Brazilian real, according to Wood Resources Quarterly (WRQ), Seattle, Wash., USA. Pine sawlog prices in Brazil, in U.S. dollar terms, fell 22% in just one year, and prices in the 2Q/12 have been at a level below where they were just before the financial crisis that hit in 2008, WRQ notes.
In the local currency, on the other hand, prices have actually increased steadily and in the 2Q/12 were at their highest levels in more than four years. Domestic demand for wood products has been a key driver for the higher log costs. In 2010 and 2011, the local lumber market was strong because of major investments in the housing construction sector in Brazil, WRQ continues. This market slowed in 2012, and instead, lumber and plywood exports have slowly picked up steam as those sectors have benefited from the weakening Brazilian real and the Brazilian forest industry became more competitive in the international market.
With the real expected to continue to stay weak against the U.S. dollar, market participants are hoping for increased exports of lumber, plywood, and value-added products in the coming months. If this scenario actually comes to fruition, demand for sawlogs may go up and log prices will likely move up in both real and dollar terms. Although Brazilian pulplog prices have not changed much in the local currency, they have fallen dramatically in U.S. dollar terms as the real weakened this past year. Eucalyptus pulplog prices in the 2Q/12 were down 28% from the same quarter in 2011, while pine pulplog prices declined 26% from a year ago, according to the WRQ.
The recent dramatic price reductions of pulpwood have had the result that wood costs for Brazilian pulp mills now are among the lowest of all regions tracked by the WRQ, compared with a year ago when wood fiber costs in Brazil were above the Global Wood Fiber Price Indices (SFPI and HFPI). Since wood fiber costs accounted for about 70% of the production costs for pulp mills in Brazil in the 2Q/12, the substantial reduction in pulpwood prices has made the country’s pulp mills more competitive in 2012 relative to other pulp producers around the world.
More information is available online.
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