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Bureau of International Recycling

BIR is the international trade association of the recycling industries. Around 60 countries are represented through their national trade associations and individual companies which are involved in recycling. BIR comprises four commodity divisions: iron and steel, non ferrous metals, paper and textiles, and has committees dealing with stainless steel and special alloys, plastics and rubber. BIR’s primary goals are to promote recycling and recyclability, thereby conserving natural resources, protecting the environment and facilitating free trade of secondary raw materials.

 

 

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Brussels, 5 November 2008

BIR Autumn Round-Table Sessions

Düsseldorf, 30-31 October 2008

Textiles Division:

Markets disturbed through disrespect of contractual

agreements

As in many of the other commodity sessions in Düsseldorf, failures to comply with

contractual agreements were highlighted at the BIR Textiles Round-Table. Honorary

President Klaus Löwer of Germany-based Hans Löwer Recycling GmbH insisted:

“People need to adhere to contracts. Compromises must be found. Unethical

behaviour ultimately leads to a dead end.”

Turning his attention to market developments in the USA, Mr Löwer said there is no

lack of originals but sorters are “still complaining of price levels that are too high”;

meanwhile, a significant proportion of US sorting capacity has shifted to other

countries such as Canada and Mexico. And in Asia, Japanese sorters are also

worried about the high price of originals while insufficient collection volumes have

been prompting South Korea to import non-sorted textiles from Japan, reported Mr

Löwer.

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Bureau of International Recycling (aisbl), Avenue Franklin Roosevelt 24, 1050 Brussels, Belgium

Tel: +32 2 627 57 70, Fax: +32 2 627 57 73, bir@bir.org, www.bir.org

Prices of originals have been holding relatively stable in recent months despite high

stocks and lower demand, observed Olaf Rintsch of Germany-based Textil Recycling

K&A Wenkhaus GmbH in his European market report. At the same time, autumn

collection volumes “have remained within the normal averages of recent years”.

Wipers are continuing to sell quite well but at lower prices, whereas the feathers

market has become “a lost cause” as prices continue to sink, according to the

President of the BIR Textiles Division.

Alan Wheeler of the Textile Recycling Association reported that the price of original

second-hand clothing in the UK has continued to increase steadily since the previous

BIR Convention in early June. His country’s annual exports of used clothing surged

from around 200,000 tonnes five years ago to 305,000 tonnes in 2007, with

particularly strong growth in shipments to Poland and the Ukraine.

The Round-Table in Düsseldorf also provided an opportunity for Mehdi Zerroug of

Framimex to update delegates on the progress of the proposal to introduce an “ecolevy”

on new clothing in France. The decree covering the formation of an eco-body

was signed in June and - “in theory” - this organisation should be created some time

in 2009. Funds are already being collected and work is currently focusing on devising

a system for monitoring those companies performing the upgrading operations, he

noted.

The guest presentation from Tilman Baehr from Hamburg’s Department of

Transfrontier Shipments of Waste underlined that the EU’s new Waste Framework

Directive positions recycling above other forms of recovery (eg energy recovery) in

the hierarchy of options for dealing with materials designated as “waste”.

Specifically in relation to waste shipments, he acknowledged the recycling industry’s

deep concerns over the threat to commercial confidentiality posed by Annex VII

document requirements. Mr Baehr also agreed that sorted textiles placed in

containers and exported to another country for subsequent sale should be

considered products rather than waste because they meet the criterion of satisfying a

demand without inflicting damage on the environment.

In a related subject, Mr Rintsch reiterated his belief that an item of clothing placed in

a collection bank should not be deemed to be a “waste” given that the person

donating it intends for it to be put to further use.

ends

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Bureau of International Recycling (aisbl), Avenue Franklin Roosevelt 24, 1050 Brussels, Belgium

Tel: +32 2 627 57 70, Fax: +32 2 627 57 73, bir@bir.org, www.bir.org