As per the reform, first announced on May 18 this year, the designated home textile products can now enter Israel if they meet international standards, and there will not be any need for them to meet local standards as well. Further, inspections would not be carried out if importers declare that the products meet international standards.
During May 2021 to April 2022, Israel imported home textile products worth $452.703 million. Of this, bed imports were valued at $117.262 million (25.90 per cent), made-ups $95.699 million (21.14 per cent), floor $73.513 million (16.24 per cent), bathroom & kitchen $48 million (10.60 per cent), sacks & bags $44.087 million (9.74 per cent), window $25.642 million (5.66 per cent), and camping $23.809 million (5.26 per cent), according to data from Fibre2Fashion’s market insight tool TexPro.
Further analysis of the data from TexPro for the last six quarters revealed volatility in Israel’s home textile imports. The import increased to $121.577 million in first quarter of this year from $115.435 million in last quarter. Israel’s home textile imports stood at $138.528 million in July-September 2021, $123.606 million in April-June 2021, $120.245 million in January-March 2021 and $98.158 million in October-December 2020.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)