The First China Ningxia International Cashmere Trade Exhibition
will be launched from September 22 to 23 in Yinchuan, capital of
Northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region.
Cashmere products manufacturers and traders as well as related
agencies from home and abroad will be invited to take part in the
event.
The exhibition will display cashmere products of various brands,
raw materials, textile machinery and dyeing auxiliaries. In
addition, standard booths will be available for domestic and
foreign traders of cashmere and cashmere products to negotiate on
trade and investment projects.
During the exhibition period, a forum on the development of the
cashmere industry will be held. Experts, scholars and entrepreneurs
involved in the industry will introduce the current situation and
development trends for the cashmere industry, exchange their ideas
on the market and technology dynamics, and explore solutions to
speed up the growth of the industry.
Local cashmere industry
Ningxia is China's only autonomous region for the Hui ethnic
group, with the Hui people, who are traditionally good at trade,
accounting for one-third of the region's population of 5.98
million.
Since the launch of the reform and opening-up policy in the late
1970s, Ningxia, one of the nation's top 10 pasturing areas, has
developed into China's major cashmere distribution center, as well
as its cashmere processing and export base.
Over the past two decades, the cashmere industry has grown into
a pillar industry of Ningxia with promising prospects.
First of all, the cashmere purchase and sales volume of the
autonomous region now takes up about half of the country's total.
More than 20,000 local traders are conducting this business across
China, as well as in seven neighboring countries, with the purchase
volume of unprocessed cashmere accounting for 40 percent of the
world's cashmere industry.
In addition, a complete industrial chain has taken shape. The
cashmere processing industry is turning from coarse processing to
deep, refined processing, with its competitive edge being
increasingly sharpened.
Furthermore, Ningxia's cashmere companies have established a
mature sales network worldwide, exporting its cashmere and cashmere
products to the European Union, the United States, Japan and the
Republic of Korea. The region has formed solid co-operation
relationships with the world's six major cashmere manufacturers -
Dawson International PLC in the United Kingdom (UK), Ford in the
United States, Alpha Tops Cashmere Co Ltd in Switzerland, G
Schneider SA in Germany, Dong Bang Textile Co Ltd in Hong Kong and
SIL Holding Ltd in the United Kingdom.
During increasingly fierce market competition, hosts of local
cashmere deep processing corporations have come to the forefront.
More than 10 of them have an annual output value of 100 million
yuan (US$12.5 million). As a result, some local cashmere product
brands have earned nationwide and even worldwide recognition. The
St Edenweiss brand cashmere sweater, for instance, was rated as
China's famous trademark by the State Administration for Industry
and Commerce in 2002.
Ningxia boasts a favorable policy environment for cashmere
industry development. The autonomous region government has already
allocated a special fund to promote the light textile industry,
while at the same time listing cashmere as one of the new materials
in its 11th Five-Year Science and Technology Development Plan
(2006-10). Additionally, the government will soon unveil a new
preferential policy to secure the continuously healthy development
of the cashmere industry.
Two cashmere industrial parks have taken root in the region,
paving the way for the intensive growth of the industry. And an
advantageous personnel pool in the fields of cashmere production
and trade also add weight to the strength of Ningxia's cashmere
industry.
(China Daily September 15, 2006)