
According to the latest report from
Timber Development UK (TDUK),
there has been a shifting emphasis in sources of supply for many
timber and panel products.
A stronger end to 2024 saw volumes of the main timber and panel
products imports finish the year up by 0.5% when compared with
2023 ¨C an increase of 45,000m3.
Import volumes have steadily improved since Q3 2022, with the
final quarter of 2024 showing volumes 13.1% higher than the same
period the year before, although it should be noted that Q4 2023
was the weakest fourth quarter by volume since Q4 2012.
The small overall volume increase in timber and panel imports in
2024 was led by modest growth in softwood imports, supported by
small increases in the volume of plywood, OSB and engineered
wood products. The growth of these four products outweighed the
volume reductions experienced by hardwood, particleboard and MDF
imports. Solid wood imports for the year were 1.2% higher than
in 2023, while imports of panel products were 1.0% lower.
A significant feature of 2024 has been the shifting emphasis in
sources of supply for many timber and panel products. While
overall volumes from the top five softwood supplying countries
reduced slightly, with only Latvia and the Republic of Ireland
growing by 7%, we saw good growth elsewhere. Norway, Lithuania,
Austria, France and Canada all enjoyed higher volumes, and the
combined growth from all countries outside of the top five in
2024 was an impressive 26%.
The overall value of softwood imports in 2024 was 1.5% higher
than in 2023. The value of planed softwood grew by 3% and the
value of sawn goods remained the same. Whitewood values were
1.7% lower in 2024 and redwood values rose by 6.2%.
All hardwood imports in 2024 were 2.2%, or around 10,000m3,
lower than in 2023. The main contributors to this fall were the
USA¡¯s supply of temperate species, and Cameroon¡¯s supply of
tropical hardwoods. These volume reductions outweighed the
higher volumes recorded from France, Latvia, Estonia and
Romania.
TDUK Head of Technical and Trade, Nick Boulton, said: ¡°It¡¯s
encouraging to see the gradual timber import growth in Q4 has
contributed to achieve higher import levels for 2024 as a whole.
However, this is at the end of a two period where we have seen
almost no growth in the volume or value of the main wood product
groups.
¡°With rising log and logistics costs over the same period the
impact on critical areas within the supply chain is becoming
increasingly apparent. The construction market as a whole
continues to be challenging leaving a suspicion that the small
rise in imports reflected increased stocks rather than
consumption as we closed 2024.¡±
Source:
buildersmerchantsnews.co.uk