In 2007 companies of the Forestry Ministry of Belarus exported $132
million worth of products, up by 48% on 2006, BelTA learnt from Ivan
Silkov, the chief of the sales and marketing department of the
ministry. According to him, in 2008 the companies intend to preserve
export upward tendencies.
In 2007 pulpwood accounted for 66.5% of the export supplies; industrial
wood – for 18.5%. Ivan Silkov explained that industrial wood was rather
popular in the domestic market. Last year because of objective reasons
Belarus cut the production of industrial wood. It happened as the
drying of fir-woods stopped and industrial wood is made of pine trees.
Moreover, the number of commercial organisations fell in the
woodworking sector; industrial wood was made for the domestic needs
mostly.
Cylindered wood accounted for 1.3% of the total export; technical wood
– for 5.3%. the Belarusian forestry companies were also selling seeds
of artificial crops, young plants, mushrooms, berries, peeled wood,
wooden pallets and containers.
The export increased mainly thanks to a favourable environment in the
international wood market. For example, prices for pulpwood have almost
doubled and totalled $55-66 per one cubic meters, prices for
edge-surfaced lumber reached $200 per one cubic meter and for
cylindered wood — $89 per one cubic meter (up by 40%).
In 2007 Belarus was exporting wood to 22 countries (the CIS states –
11%; the non-CIS states – 89%). Poland is the main consumer of the
Belarusian timber (42% of the export). Then goes Latvia (20.2%),
Lithuania (11.4%) and Russia (11%).
The companies of the branch also exported $3 million worth of chain
saws and chain saw spare parts. They had a trade surplus worth of $129
million.
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