Portuguese textiles become international player

The industry has benefited from its flexibility and inexpensive labour along with a spirit of innovation focused on limiting damage to the environment.Near Vila Nova de Famalicao, in the northern district of Porto, the Riopele factory hums with a deafening noise of nearly 200 state-of-the art weaving machines that run 24 hours a day six days a week.

The textile industry’s advantages are “reactivity and the capacity to adapt”, engineer Jose Rosas told AFP as he stood by a digital screen where he follows the massive workshop’s activity in real time.One of the jewels in an industry anchored in the Ave valley, the company founded in 1927 and its thousand employees are struggling to meet orders after a respite during the Covid crisis.Every day, the factory produces 40,000 metres (131,200 feet) of fabric, 98 percent of which is earmarked for export.Among its growing customers are Spain’s Inditex, which owns Zara, and France’s SMCP (Sandro, Maje, Claudie Pierlot and Fursac), according to Portuguese industry figures.There is also increased demand from firms in Germany and Italy as well as in the United States such as Tommy Hilfiger.Customers value a “capacity to be different” from foreign competition, Riopele group director Albertina Reis told AFP, citing her firm’s ability to use “new techniques” for sustainable output without compromising on aesthetics.Alberto Paccanelli, who heads Brussels-based Euratex, which represents the European textile and clothing industry, paid tribute to Portugal’s sector.”Portugal has the advantage of a workforce that remains competitive” by offering “quality products at reasonable prices,” according to the president of Euratex, which held its annual conference in Porto in mid-October.Portugal’s textile sector has made a dramatic comeback.Shaken by competition from companies relocating to Asia for cheaper production costs, the sector lost between the years 2000 and 2015 nearly 100,000 jobs out of a total of 235,000 recorded at the start of the era, according to the Portuguese Textile Association (ATP).Riopele is one of Portugal’s biggest textile producers but there are many others, including JF Almeida and the TMG group.- Record exports -Since then, the sector has resumed hiring, benefiting from a minimum salary of 705 euros ($696) per month paid over 14 months, one of the lowest wages in the European Union, after those in eastern Europe.Exports of textile products from Portugal, which find their largest markets in Spain and France, hit last year the record sales figure of 5.4 billion euros, 16.4 percent higher than the previous year, according to the ATP.The industry group hopes to do even better this year.This success is owing not only to Portugal’s low production costs, but also to the sector’s capacity to “adapt to the market”, ATP President Mario Jorge Machado said.Following the pandemic, which led to delays in deliveries, the industry prefers to use supply chains that are closer to home, Machado said.”The companies understood that they needed to find solutions and partners to reconcile sustainable development with competitiveness,” he said, hitting on the theme of the Porto conference.To meet the challenge, the region of Vila Nova de Famalicao has been equipped for 30 years with a technological institute for textiles and clothing (CITEVE), which works on new fibres produced from recycled material and dyes derived from natural products.However, the sharp gas and electricity price increases caused by the war in Ukraine penalise a sector heavily dependent on energy.Despite several billion euros in Portuguese government aid pledged for textile firms, industry executives are calling for a coordinated European plan to avert distortions in competition.That would “avoid creating competition” among European countries, said Dirk Vantyghem, Euratex director general. 

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