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US mask makers say they are being clobbered by cheaper competition from China

US mask makers say they are being clobbered by cheaper competition from China
the wispy material rolling off. This production line is made from plastic, but it might as well be spun from gold. It's melt blown textile, the material that makes certain facemasks so effective against the Corona virus. The melt blown previously was roughly 25 to $28,000 per ton, and then towards the end of April went over $450,000 per tonne. It's a complete seller's market. Most of the raw material for personal protective equipment, or PPE, is made in China. And amid critical shortages, medical mask and gown makers around the world are running out of this crucial ingredient. We definitely need more capacity, and it's it's restricting our ability to do what we need to do for the country procedure. Ameritech is the largest domestic maker of medical masks. We need factories manufacturing, the raw materials. We stepped that up. There are just a handful of American businesses producing melt blown textile, and those firms say they can't make enough. The Trump administration has spent more than $20 billion on cove in 19 contracts, but despite early warnings, the federal government failed to block exports of the material by those domestic producers, and it hasn't yet made the long term commitments US manufacturers say they need to ramp up production. University of North Carolina researcher Philip Clapp explains that mask filtration efficiency doesn't depend on the size of the pores in the fabric, but on the makeup of the melt loan plastic that the electrostatic charge of the material actually helps to kind of suck up the smaller particles out of the year and makes in a work very well. Rear Admiral John Plug Check heads up FEMA Supply Chain Task Force. He says he's confident that increased domestic production will be able to meet peak surge demand for Cove. In response, we've we've systematically attacked the supply chains from raw material to manufacturing to distribution light. All Incorporated is spending more than $25 million to add to melt blown lines at its New Hampshire facility. But Reese says American manufacturers will never be able to compete with Chinese prices, and he's reluctant to spend millions on a market that will most likely evaporate when the pandemic passes without some significant intervention or legislation. It's not gonna happen. It's very, very risk, Allen breed, Associated Press
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US mask makers say they are being clobbered by cheaper competition from China
When the pandemic first hit last year, Brian Wolin was working as a chiropractor, and his brother-in-law, Evan Shulman, ran a business making luxury retail displays for brands, such as Gucci and Chanel.But once the lockdowns began, they both found themselves unable to work. That's when they decided to launch Protective Health Gear, turning over a large part of Shulman's manufacturing space to the production of masks, specifically N95 respirators, which were in high demand and limited supply.Protective Health Gear started selling the masks last September. Customer demand was closely tied to COVID-19 case numbers in the U.S., and as the winter surge took hold in December, orders went "through the roof," Wolin said, making it difficult for the company to keep up. But the bulk of the company's sales were coming from the general public, not from hospitals, distributors or government agencies that buy masks in bulk, he said. When it came to those contracts, "we always lost out to the cheapest company," Wolin said.Often, he said, those cheaper competitors have been based in China."We pay overtime. We pay double time on weekends," Wolin said. "When it comes to overseas production, we can't compete with the cost of labor."In 2019, 72% of the masks and respirators the U.S. imported came from China, according to research by Chad Bown at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. When the pandemic hit China first, the Chinese government nationalized the production of its personal protective equipment, including masks, and curtailed exports to other countries. The U.S. soon discovered it did not have enough domestic manufacturing capacity to meet surging demand, leading to critical shortages and leaving U.S. health care workers and others exposed.That's where Protective Health Gear and other U.S.-based startups came in. Protective Health Gear is part of the American Mask Manufacturer's Association (AMMA), a group of more than two dozen U.S.-based mask producers that started up during the pandemic to meet growing demand. But after China began exporting more PPE to the United States, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention later eased mask mandates for vaccinated Americans, the group warned that its member companies could go out of business without government help. Lloyd Armbrust, the group's president, estimates that up to 10 of the group's 29 members have now stopped production, at a cost of nearly 6,000 jobs.The group said it is working toward filing a petition to the World Trade Organization, and has accused China of "subsidizing the price of face masks at a fraction of the cost to produce" and undercutting U.S. producers. "While American manufacturers stepped up to fill the void, China slashed their prices and are continuing to dump masks in the United States for $0.01 per masks, or less, continuing to undercut American manufacturers' ability to produce reliable, high quality American-made masks for the country,' the group claimed in June. CNN has not independently verified this claim. China's Ministry of Commerce did not reply to a request for comment."As long as foreign masks are available, going to keep buying them," said Mike Bowen, the vice president of Texas-based mask manufacturer Prestige Ameritech. Bowen has warned for years that U.S. dependence on cheaper foreign masks poses a national security issue.The solution, he said, is to stop all imports. "Any plan that government has that allows foreign masks in the U.S. will fail to secure the supply chain," he said. He believes the American government should use any tool at its disposal, including tariffs and subsidies, to achieve this goal. But he's not hopeful the government will risk that kind of upheaval with COVID-19 still spreading. "I think the pandemic will end without securing these supply chains," he said.Significant progress?In addition to the smaller producers that came into the market, several major manufacturers also ramped up production significantly last year. Honeywell increased its N95 production capacity 50-fold to one billion per year. 3M tripled production of N95s and other respirators in 2020 compared to 2019. And, at the same time, according to Bown's research, the amount the U.S. spent on PPE imports from China more than tripled.Soon after taking office earlier this year, President Joe Biden signed two executive orders calling for federal agencies to review the United State's PPE supply chain and identify potential shortfalls in domestic manufacturing capacity. "We shouldn't have to rely on a foreign country, especially one that doesn't share our interests or our values, in order to protect and provide for our people during a national emergency," he told reporters in February.The White House tells CNN significant progress has been made on reducing imports and prioritizing domestic production of PPE. According to Tim Manning, the administration's national COVID-19 supply coordinator, in the U.S. " current estimate is that manufacturing capacity matches what we believe is unconstrained demand ." A report from the government accountability office in July backs this up, showing that by March this year, estimated production capacity for N95s in America had exceeded estimated domestic demand.In addition to the billions of dollars already committed to shoring up domestic manufacturing in the administration's American Rescue Plan, he said more money is coming and the administration is "rethinking" the way it creates its supplier contracts to focus on U.S.-made products. It's also having conversations with group purchasers for hospitals, and state and local government officials about buying U.S.-made PPE, he said.Planning for the next pandemicThe key question for the U.S. government, however, is how much domestic production it needs to support in times of low demand "to make it easier to scale up production when you do have a pandemic," said Bown.Even though the White House says there is enough manufacturing capacity in the county to meet demand now, there's also a risk it will go away as the pandemic dies down. Honeywell says it has already closed manual production efforts for N95s at two facilities, though the company says it has maintained automated lines at other locations.Wolin said his company needs government support so it can survive the lean times and be around when it matters. When the CDC relaxed its mask guidance in May, demand fell off a cliff. Protective Health Gear went from having 150 employees to 15. Now, as demand increases due to the spread of the Delta variant, they've ramped back up to 65 (hiring is proving to be another major challenge).Wolin said he has been in talks with the government about buying its N95s for government agencies and the strategic national stockpile, but so far no deal has been made."We're not asking for handouts. We know that you need these particular supplies and we're just asking that you purchase what we have," he said.

When the pandemic first hit last year, Brian Wolin was working as a chiropractor, and his brother-in-law, Evan Shulman, ran a business making luxury retail displays for brands, such as Gucci and Chanel.

But once the lockdowns began, they both found themselves unable to work. That's when they decided to launch Protective Health Gear, turning over a large part of Shulman's manufacturing space to the production of masks, specifically N95 respirators, which were in high demand and limited supply.

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Protective Health Gear started selling the masks last September. Customer demand was closely tied to COVID-19 case numbers in the U.S., and as the winter surge took hold in December, orders went "through the roof," Wolin said, making it difficult for the company to keep up. But the bulk of the company's sales were coming from the general public, not from hospitals, distributors or government agencies that buy masks in bulk, he said. When it came to those contracts, "we always lost out to the cheapest company," Wolin said.

Often, he said, those cheaper competitors have been based in China.

"We pay overtime. We pay double time on weekends," Wolin said. "When it comes to overseas production, we can't compete with the cost of labor."

In 2019, 72% of the masks and respirators the U.S. imported came from China, according to research by Chad Bown at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. When the pandemic hit China first, the Chinese government of its personal protective equipment, including masks, and curtailed exports to other countries. The U.S. soon discovered it did not have enough domestic manufacturing capacity to meet surging demand, leading to critical shortages and leaving U.S. health care workers and others exposed.

That's where Protective Health Gear and other U.S.-based startups came in. Protective Health Gear is part of the (AMMA), a group of more than two dozen U.S.-based mask producers that started up during the pandemic to meet growing demand. But after China began exporting more PPE to the United States, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention later eased mask mandates for vaccinated Americans, the group warned that its member companies could go out of business without government help. Lloyd Armbrust, the group's president, estimates that up to 10 of the group's 29 members have now stopped production, at a cost of nearly 6,000 jobs.

The group said it is working toward filing a petition to the World Trade Organization, and has accused China of "subsidizing the price of face masks at a fraction of the cost to produce" and undercutting U.S. producers. "While American manufacturers stepped up to fill the void, China slashed their prices and are continuing to dump masks in the United States for $0.01 per masks, or less, continuing to undercut American manufacturers' ability to produce reliable, high quality American-made masks for the country,' the group claimed in June. CNN has not independently verified this claim. China's Ministry of Commerce did not reply to a request for comment.

"As long as foreign masks are available, [hospitals and other U.S. buyers are] going to keep buying them," said Mike Bowen, the vice president of Texas-based mask manufacturer Prestige Ameritech. Bowen has warned for years that U.S. dependence on cheaper foreign masks poses a national security issue.

The solution, he said, is to stop all imports. "Any plan that government has that allows foreign masks in the U.S. will fail to secure the supply chain," he said. He believes the American government should use any tool at its disposal, including tariffs and subsidies, to achieve this goal. But he's not hopeful the government will risk that kind of upheaval with COVID-19 still spreading. "I think the pandemic will end without securing these supply chains," he said.

Significant progress?

In addition to the smaller producers that came into the market, several major manufacturers also ramped up production significantly last year. Honeywell increased its N95 production capacity 50-fold to one billion per year. 3M tripled production of N95s and other respirators in 2020 compared to 2019. And, at the same time, according to Bown's research, the amount the U.S. spent on PPE imports from China more than tripled.

Soon after taking office earlier this year, President Joe Biden signed two executive orders calling for federal agencies to review the United State's PPE supply chain and identify potential shortfalls in domestic manufacturing capacity. "We shouldn't have to rely on a foreign country, especially one that doesn't share our interests or our values, in order to protect and provide for our people during a national emergency," he told reporters in February.

The White House tells CNN significant progress has been made on reducing imports and prioritizing domestic production of PPE. According to Tim Manning, the administration's national COVID-19 supply coordinator, in the U.S. "[the] current estimate is that manufacturing capacity matches what we believe is unconstrained demand [in the U.S.]." A report from the government accountability office in July backs this up, showing that by March this year, estimated production capacity for N95s in America had exceeded estimated domestic demand.

In addition to the billions of dollars already committed to shoring up domestic manufacturing in the administration's American Rescue Plan, he said more money is coming and the administration is "rethinking" the way it creates its supplier contracts to focus on U.S.-made products. It's also having conversations with group purchasers for hospitals, and state and local government officials about buying U.S.-made PPE, he said.

Planning for the next pandemic

The key question for the U.S. government, however, is how much domestic production it needs to support in times of low demand "to make it easier to scale up production when you do have a pandemic," said Bown.

Even though the White House says there is enough manufacturing capacity in the county to meet demand now, there's also a risk it will go away as the pandemic dies down. Honeywell says it has already closed manual production efforts for N95s at two facilities, though the company says it has maintained automated lines at other locations.

Wolin said his company needs government support so it can survive the lean times and be around when it matters. When the CDC relaxed its mask guidance in May, demand fell off a cliff. Protective Health Gear went from having 150 employees to 15. Now, as demand increases due to the spread of the Delta variant, they've ramped back up to 65 (hiring is proving to be another major challenge).

Wolin said he has been in talks with the government about buying its N95s for government agencies and the strategic national stockpile, but so far no deal has been made.

"We're not asking for handouts. We know that you need these particular supplies and we're just asking that you purchase what we have," he said.