Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
post

Mad world, Masked world: Business booms for the mask-makers, but is the fall in sight?

Mon 05 Oct 2020    
EcoBalance
| 2 min read

The outbreak of Covid-19 is the best thing that ever happened to the mask industry, but it’s going to require a bit of cleaning up. Side effects of the boom include diplomatic spats, quality scandals, price gouging, and fraud. 

And dealing with excess capacity and a rising mountain of polypropylene waste will be a headache.

Fear of illness is a reliable driver of consumption. With officials desperate to supply frightened masses, companies with the right machinery have quickly converted factory lines to churn out protective personal equipment, better known as PPE.

Minnesota-based 3M said demand for N95 masks in the U.S. healthcare sector surged to as much as 40 times pre-pandemic levels. At the same time an army of middlemen, speculators and fraudsters leapt into action to fill unmet orders.

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development projects annual mask sales will increase over 200 times to $166 billion in 2020. Even that might not be enough to sate the current market. 

Globally, 3M has doubled production of its N95 respirators since January, and is on track to produce 2 billion respirators by the end of 2020. But the company believes demand for N95s and other respirators still exceeds the entire industry’s capacity.

China already accounted for about half of the world’s mask production at the start of the crisis, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. 

It may well account for more now given how quickly its nimble factory managers pivoted to making PPE. Chinese electric-car maker BYD, for example, snapped into action and signed supply deals with Japan’s SoftBank and the state of California, among others; it now says it is the world’s largest mask-maker. 

The pandemic also spurred the creation of better-looking, if less medically effective, products, including breathable sports masks and fashion statements like Louis Vuitton’s gold-studded face shield.

The struggle over supply saw many countries put export restrictions into place, which created big returns for smugglers. Shortages encouraged amateurs and scammers to jump into the industry with predictable results.

Ultimately, there will be an environmental cost to bear. Around 75% of coronavirus-related plastic — including used masks designed for single use – will pour into landfills, rivers and oceans. That is a mammoth amount of petroleum-based fabric; in April China churned out nearly 1 billion masks per day, according to data in a report by the state-owned People’s Daily. Many of the millions of discarded masks have begun swamping beaches and nature trails in Hong Kong.

And while it seems base consumption will remain higher than it was before the pandemic, especially if mask-wearing in public becomes more routine, it is also unlikely to remain anywhere near the current hysterically elevated levels. 

Governments with declining case counts are already starting to re-focus on securing vaccines instead of defending their PPE stockpiles. As economic activity normalises, nearly every other sector will benefit apart from masks, which may end up in a glut. 

The global scramble to meet the demand shortfall has been impressive. But as governments look forward to a cure, they might want to address some of the lingering side effects of fighting off the virus too.

[Sourced from Agencies]