Tags:
China,
Add more tags...,
In a hotel conference-room-turned classroom on the outskirts of the Chinese
capital, more than 50 leather experts from around the world are poring over
thick textbooks full of chemical statements.
At the expense of the Chinese government, the students from 36 countries,
including Kenya, are learning how to turn cattle hides into finished leather
using the latest technology.
The idea is to share the vast know-how gained by China in the last 20 years
of its rise to leather producing heavyweight, says course organiser, Yu Shuxian,
a senior engineer at the China Leather and Footwear Industry Research Institute.
"We want to help developing countries grow their industry," she told Business
Daily. The countries participating include Tanzania, Eritrea, Ethiopia,
Zimbabwe, Zambia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria and more from South America and Asia.
China's Ministry of Commerce is funding students' flights, accommodation,
month-long training course and visits to local tanneries as part of its
assistance to developing countries.
Ding Zhiwen, another researcher at the institute, says the leather industry
in most developing countries is small and cannot fund the kind of research work
carried out in China. "We have several universities that do research on leather
but few of these countries have that capacity."
Kenya's leather industry badly needs an injection of new technology. The
sub-sector has hardly changed over the years and seen little investment. Yet it
has the potential to become an important source of exports, particularly if it
can move up a gear from semi-processed hides to finished leather, worth more
than five times more than the midway product.
Nancy Gitau, a leather development officer at Kenya's Ministry of Livestock
and Development, is impressed by the Chinese technology taught in the month-long
course in Beijing.
"They're really advanced here. They have developed their own machines and
they're cheaper than American ones."
Among the new technologies being taught is a tanning method that uses less of
the potentially harmful chromium chemicals common in standard processing. China
is also using more vegetable dyes to replace chemical products.
"We're looking into new chemicals to improve the quality of leather and to
reduce environmental pollution. We're also introducing new equipment to increase
productivity," says Ms Yu.
Tanneries have a large impact on the environment, being heavy users of water
and chemicals.
China has recently raised its standards on waste water treatment and also
increased enforcement of regulations on pollutants. Some of its smaller
tanneries have been forced to close because they do not meet standards.
Others need to adopt new technology. In Nairobi, Elkanah Malala, senior
assistant leather development officer in the department of veterinary services,
says China is the biggest importer of Kenyan leather, buying some Sh2 billion of
wet blue, or the hides that have been part processed but not yet turned into
finished leather. (The term refers to the light blue colour caused by adding
chrome salts during the tanning process.)
That's about half of the total revenue generated by the industry. Almost all
exports are wet blue, however, and he says Kenya needs a partner to help it
boost its capacity to produce high quality finished leather.
"The market requires goods to be finished in a certain way and we need to
learn how to do that."
Kenya's northern neighbour, Ethiopia, is already getting greater value out of
its leather industry thanks to strong contacts with long established leather
experts in Italy. It now exports a greater proportion of finished leather.
Mr Malala is looking into establishing partnerships with a Chinese or Indian
company to achieve the same feat. There is some hope for government support. The
leather industry has been identified as an important sector under the
government's economic recovery strategy, as well as the Strategic Recovery for
Agriculture (SRA) and the Vision 2030 plan.
Important commodity
"There wasn't much focus on it before but now they have realised it's an
important commodity to develop."
During a break in the leather class, Ms Gitau says she plans to report home
on the need to bring Chinese expertise to Kenya to improve leather processing
techniques. Kenya may need to shift into higher value processing before Chinese
firms seize on the opportunity.
China's leather industry is currently going through tough times. Beijing
wants to limit leather processing because of its large impact on the environment
and has reduced tax rebates on leather exports.
It wants to
encourage only higher value processing, or the production of leather goods like
shoes and bags, and not the processing and re-export of leather for
manufacturing elsewhere.
This may encourage Chinese tanneries to set up in countries like Kenya to
access raw hides and carry out the processing under more favourable conditions.
One Chinese tannery has already visited Kenya, interested in starting up a
business in the country.
allAfrica.com:
Africa: China Breaks New Ground in Leather Technology (Page 1 of 1)
|