
The perfect storm is hitting the industry: raw material costs
are not coming down even though demand is weak
International geopolitical tensions, fuelled by the war in the
Middle East, are having a heavy impact on the timber market. The
perfect storm is hitting the sector. The conflict in Iran has
paralysed the Gulf routes: with freight rates up tenfold (from
USD 500 to USD 4,000), exports to the Middle East are at a
standstill, leaving Europe with an oversupply that,
paradoxically, does not cool the price lists. It is the
'Divergent Binary Theory'*: in the face of weak demand, the cost
of logs remains at an all-time high (up to 148 euros/cubic metre
in the DACH area, i.e. Germany, Austria and Switzerland),
squeezing sawmills' margins into a systemic loss. In Italia, as
in Europe, the market for logs is saturated, but the severe
limitations on cuts due to bark beetle damage and various storms
(such as Vaia) are keeping log prices firmly at an all-time
high, given the difficulty in finding available raw material.
From this point of view, the case of the Magnifica Comunità di
Fiemme is emblematic: for the first time post-Vaia and post bark
beetle, it will have to purchase more than half of the raw
material outside its forests. This is an epoch-making change
that pushes the country towards a transformation model with high
added value, while the large European sawmills, forced to 'too
big to stop', are moving towards budgets in the red by millions
of Euros.
The Italian sawmill revolution
The sawmill sector in Italia has been undergoing a profound
transformation over the last 15 years, driven by a paradox
between technological growth, generational change, flexibility
and inefficient management of raw material by public
authorities, according to an analysis by Conlegno. The
industrial evolution, thanks to the combination of the abundance
of timber (caused by Vaia and bark beetle) and the increase in
prices of sawn timber, and the contribution of Industry 4.0, has
led to a modernisation of Italian sawmills: they have increased
their production capacity while maintaining their typical
flexibility, managing to compete without the economies of scale
of the central European giants. However, compared to European
sawmills, Italian sawmills suffer from the blockage of the
national forestry system, struggling to find logs despite the
theoretical availability of material in the territory.
Therefore, according to Conlegno, while Italian sawmills have
made a quality leap by investing in technology and productivity,
they remain 'hostage' to a forest bureaucracy that has enormous
difficulties in managing the forest, forcing companies to search
for raw material even at long distances.
The panel flare
It is no better on the processed products front. Soaring oil and
gas prices have overwhelmed the panel industry. The increase in
chemical components for glues (urea in the lead, burdened by
Cbam regulations) and the energy costs of presses have generated
price rises of between 5 and 10 per cent. In detail, OSB: +10%
since the beginning of the year, driven by the restart of
construction sites; Particleboard: increases of over 10% due to
strategic production stoppages; Pine plywood: the most critical
case. The combination of EU anti-dumping tariffs (5.4 per cent),
the reopening of the US market, and the increase in freight
rates from Brazil pushed up list prices over 10 per cent.
Pallets and wooden packaging between "anvil and hammer"
The picture reflects an extreme industrial dualism: on the one
hand, the forced resilience of pallet and packaging prices in a
stagnant market (including the construction market), which are
struggling to pass on price increases to end customers despite
pressure from sawmills, squeezed by prohibitive log costs and in
the midst of collapsing profitability. On the other hand, the
recent Cril Index (promoted by Filiera Legno) certifies an
opposite trend: between the beginning of the year and the end of
March 2026, semi-finished products for pallets recorded a sharp
increase of 4.8%, confirming an upstream inflationary drive that
has no outlet downstream. In this scenario, the continuation of
this downstream value transfer situation will lead to serious
problems for manufacturers of pallets and wood packaging, up to
the realignment of index values between logs and sawn timber.
This imbalance cannot last long without triggering drastic and
inevitable upheavals in the entire supply chain.

Source:
en.ilsole24ore.com