Sunday Times E-Edition

Mask-makers face new markets

● Mask-makers are looking for new markets as countries start easing the pandemicinduced restrictions that transformed their businesses overnight.

UK-based Cambridge Mask, which reported monthly sales rocketing from 15,000 masks in January 2020 to 500,000 eight months later, is starting to push the benefits of masks in places ravaged by wildfires or with high levels of air pollution. Other companies are targeting medical professionals and exports.

Even if those efforts pan out, mask companies are still bracing for a slump in sales over the coming months as the pandemic ebbs.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson foreshadowed the shift this week, announcing an end to the mask-wearing requirement in stores and on public transport as infections recede.

In late December, Cambridge Mask published a blog post listing non-Covid reasons to wear masks, such as seasonal allergies or the flu.

The company, which sells reusable masks with military-grade filtration technology, has also recently partnered with an international reforestation nonprofit organisation to raise awareness about wildfires, one of its main pre-pandemic sources of demand.

“We’re starting to fight the challenge of wildfires by rebuilding forests, but also it’ sa way to market and promote,” said CEO Christopher Dobbing, who founded the company in 2015.

He sees increasing demand for his products from forest fires linked to global warming.

Even after the pandemic, global sales are likely to remain higher than before Covid because masks have become more acceptable in closed spaces such as aircraft, according to Lisa Brosseau, a respiratory protection expert and retired professor at the University of Illinois Chicago.

Prior to the pandemic, demand came mostly from Asian countries, where it has long been more common to wear a mask to avoid the spread of germs.

Some mask-makers are looking to increase their international reach. San Francisco-based Vogmask said it wants to restart exports to Europe and India once US demand recedes.

Vogmask partner Wendover Brown said the future demand will be for “high-quality reusable” masks.

Norway’s ZincIn is in talks with US distributors to sell its hi-tech reusable masks.

The company, which secured certification by European regulators last year, hopes to sell as many as 200,000 masks in the New York area, said founder and CEO Kjetil Christoffersen.

Business The Big Read

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2022-01-23T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-01-23T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://times-e-editions.pressreader.com/article/282273848743488

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