Dubai Telegraph - Portugal looks to put new twist on cork industry

EUR -
AED 3.87282
AFN 71.625128
ALL 98.263321
AMD 407.970486
ANG 1.899791
AOA 962.663602
ARS 1051.067339
AUD 1.631077
AWG 1.900549
AZN 1.798486
BAM 1.958049
BBD 2.128344
BDT 125.96467
BGN 1.955085
BHD 0.397241
BIF 3112.4647
BMD 1.054396
BND 1.418488
BOB 7.283365
BRL 6.104322
BSD 1.054116
BTN 88.969903
BWP 14.469687
BYN 3.449662
BYR 20666.160971
BZD 2.12474
CAD 1.482096
CDF 3021.898508
CHF 0.937527
CLF 0.037279
CLP 1028.647693
CNY 7.62536
CNH 7.633931
COP 4725.539129
CRC 538.397922
CUC 1.054396
CUP 27.941493
CVE 110.391784
CZK 25.293059
DJF 187.70647
DKK 7.458966
DOP 63.75201
DZD 141.188128
EGP 52.232037
ERN 15.81594
ETB 130.663286
FJD 2.398592
FKP 0.832253
GBP 0.831576
GEL 2.873225
GGP 0.832253
GHS 16.944461
GIP 0.832253
GMD 74.862142
GNF 9084.57199
GTQ 8.140388
GYD 220.533281
HKD 8.206485
HNL 26.616695
HRK 7.52128
HTG 138.495269
HUF 406.18176
IDR 16739.748546
ILS 3.943104
IMP 0.832253
INR 89.025973
IQD 1380.88594
IRR 44395.341775
ISK 145.714955
JEP 0.832253
JMD 166.872443
JOD 0.747672
JPY 164.844787
KES 136.249032
KGS 91.075039
KHR 4281.490904
KMF 491.879999
KPW 948.955971
KRW 1477.082135
KWD 0.324311
KYD 0.878409
KZT 522.600203
LAK 23156.595221
LBP 94394.511571
LKR 307.963695
LRD 194.484286
LSL 19.29456
LTL 3.113357
LVL 0.637794
LYD 5.148938
MAD 10.528192
MDL 19.09493
MGA 4938.695484
MKD 61.600748
MMK 3424.636974
MNT 3582.837442
MOP 8.450305
MRU 41.904537
MUR 49.757409
MVR 16.300935
MWK 1827.807895
MXN 21.581165
MYR 4.723167
MZN 67.322601
NAD 19.29456
NGN 1771.058131
NIO 38.791056
NOK 11.736207
NPR 142.352166
NZD 1.798557
OMR 0.40752
PAB 1.054111
PEN 4.016613
PGK 4.176381
PHP 62.033287
PKR 292.777141
PLN 4.322444
PYG 8232.454929
QAR 3.842732
RON 4.971059
RSD 117.110839
RUB 104.854696
RWF 1447.269043
SAR 3.960344
SBD 8.839406
SCR 14.35464
SDG 634.22317
SEK 11.578211
SGD 1.417082
SHP 0.832253
SLE 23.931507
SLL 22110.161243
SOS 602.394704
SRD 37.27975
STD 21823.867718
SVC 9.223593
SYP 2649.201352
SZL 19.30226
THB 36.752023
TJS 11.236759
TMT 3.690386
TND 3.329239
TOP 2.469499
TRY 36.287882
TTD 7.15722
TWD 34.333229
TZS 2804.692693
UAH 43.455414
UGX 3868.442885
USD 1.054396
UYU 44.781644
UZS 13500.505255
VES 47.921351
VND 26768.477635
VUV 125.180008
WST 2.943442
XAF 656.714347
XAG 0.03453
XAU 0.00041
XCD 2.849558
XDR 0.794116
XOF 656.714347
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.44107
ZAR 19.243623
ZMK 9490.823149
ZMW 28.908201
ZWL 339.515071
  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.21

    -0.23%

  • BCC

    -2.2000

    140.35

    -1.57%

  • RBGPF

    61.8400

    61.84

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.1000

    13.27

    -0.75%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    24.55

    -0.24%

  • NGG

    0.2500

    62.37

    +0.4%

  • RIO

    -0.1900

    60.43

    -0.31%

  • CMSD

    -0.0050

    24.725

    -0.02%

  • BCE

    -0.3700

    26.84

    -1.38%

  • GSK

    -0.7200

    34.39

    -2.09%

  • RELX

    -0.1700

    45.95

    -0.37%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3200

    6.79

    -4.71%

  • AZN

    -0.2500

    65.04

    -0.38%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.68

    -0.81%

  • BP

    0.4800

    29.05

    +1.65%

  • BTI

    0.0700

    35.49

    +0.2%

Portugal looks to put new twist on cork industry
Portugal looks to put new twist on cork industry / Photo: CARLOS COSTA - AFP

Portugal looks to put new twist on cork industry

Portugal, the world's leading cork producer, is finding new uses for the material, from footwear to furniture, as demand for wine bottle stoppers wanes.

Text size:

Producers highlight the environmentally friendly properties of cork, which is lightweight, recyclable, waterproof and fire-resistant, to encourage its use in diverse settings.

Cork is obtained by stripping the bark of cork oak trees every nine years in a careful process that allows the tree to regenerate and grow, making the industry naturally sustainable.

The material has "a negative carbon footprint because it comes from a tree that captures CO2 day and night", Antonio Rios de Amorim, the CEO of the world's largest cork producer Corticeira Amorim, told AFP.

The push to diversify comes as global sales of wine decline, reducing demand for cork wine stoppers which have long faced competition from cheaper plastic stoppers and screw tops.

"Periods of slowdown must be used to question what we do," said Amorim, whose ancestors founded Corticeira Amorim 154 years ago in the northern village of Mozelos, about 30 kilometres (18 miles) south of second city Porto.

- Booster rockets, metro seats -

Thanks to cork's cell-like structure, the material is elastic and highly impermeable, making it suitable to make shoes as well as ties, pants and other clothes.

Furniture designers are also increasingly drawn to the material.

British designer Tom Dixon has called it a "dream material" and put out a range of dark cork furniture that includes tables, stools and shelves using cork from Portugal.

The Lisbon metro in 2020 replaced the fabric lining on all seats of its train fleet with cork, an easier to maintain material.

Builders have been drawn to the material because of its unique thermal insulation and sound absorption properties.

Cork is also finding its way into space. It is used in thermal protection coating on booster rockets because of its resistance "to strong variations in temperature", said Amorim.

Making wine bottle stoppers, however, remains the main activity for Portugal's cork industry, which employs around 8,000 people.

Corticeira Amorim makes some six billion cork wine bottle stoppers per year, almost all of them for export mainly to Chile, France and the United States.

It accounts for 70 percent of the global market share for cork stoppers and posted sales of 985 million euros (one billion dollars) in 2023, slightly lower than in the previous year.

- Traditional methods -

Cork is made from the bark of the cork oak (Quercus suber) found in countries of the Mediterranean basin.

Portugal is home to about a third of the world's total area dedicated to this tree -- more than any other country -- and accounts for nearly half the world's supply of cork.

There are also plantations in France, Spain, Italy. Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia.

In the province of Ribatejo around 80 kilometres east of Lisbon, cork oaks stretch as far as the eye can see.

The bark is removed from the tree in summer using traditional methods handed down from generation to generation.

It is a highly precise technique "that takes several years to learn", said Nelson Ferreira, a 43-year-old cork bark harvester, adding he takes great care not to damage the tree.

The bark is then taken to Corticeira Amorim's factories in the north of Portugal where it is steam-treated, cut into smaller pieces and then fed into machines that punch out stoppers.

The preservation of cork oaks is crucial for Portugal, which has made them a protected species since it takes an average of 40 years for a tree to start producing cork that can be used by cork makers.

H.El-Hassany--DT