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Rui Mendes says that when coronavirus first arrived, the business he helps to run had to slam on its brakes and skid to an immediate stop.
Mr Mendes is a director at a Portuguese firm called Rodi, one of Europe’s largest manufacturers of bike wheels.
“At the pandemic’s onset many clients [bike firms] started to postpone orders, fearing what might happen,” he says. “We ended up stopping production.” To try to save jobs and salaries, the 300 employees agreed to immediately take a three-week holiday. But then a month later things dramatically changed for the better, as millions of people across Europe took up cycling during the pandemic.
“From April things turned completely,” says Mr Mendes. “Orders doubled, the market just exploded. Apprehension gave way to relief as the employees realised that the pandemic wasn’t going to threaten their jobs.” Rui Mendes says that when coronavirus first arrived, the business he helps to run had to slam on its brakes and skid to an immediate stop.
Mr Mendes is a director at a Portuguese firm called Rodi, one of Europe’s largest manufacturers of bike wheels.
“At the pandemic’s onset many clients [bike firms] started to postpone orders, fearing what might happen,” he says. “We ended up stopping production.” To try to save jobs and salaries, the 300 employees agreed to immediately take a three-week holiday. But then a month later things dramatically changed for the better, as millions of people across Europe took up cycling during the pandemic.
“From April things turned completely,” says Mr Mendes. “Orders doubled, the market just exploded. Apprehension gave way to relief as the employees realised that the pandemic wasn’t going to threaten their jobs.” That was more than one fifth of the total 12.2 million bicycles produced. Italy was in second place on 2.1 million, and Germany ranked third with 1.3 million.
Portugal doesn’t have any big bike brand names, instead it mainly does manufacturing for foreign companies. For example, one of its largest producers - RTE - makes bicycles for French giant Decathlon. Another - FJ Bikes Europe - is owned by Taiwan’s Fritz Jou
Manufacturing.
The industry is concentrated around one small city - Agueda in central Portugal, some 75 km (47 miles) south of Porto. In addition to the businesses that build full bikes, there are also firms, such as Rodi, that make bike parts or accessories.
In total, there are more than 60 factories, and almost 8,000 people employed in the sector in and around Agueda.
Jo?o Filipe Miranda says that his business will post a revenue figure of €27m ($30m; £23m) this year, “our best since the company’s foundation” in 1940.
The company - Miranda - makes components for bicycle gears, including those for electric bikes.
Mr Miranda says that while Portugal’s bike industry is “known for its quality”, it also benefits from offering its European customers much shorter supply chains than rival manufacturers based in Asia.
Portugal is further helped by the continuing tariffs put on Chinese bike imports in to the European
Union.
These extra fees or duties currently stand at up to 48.5% for standard bikes, and as high as 79.3% for electric ones.
Yet, Gil Nadais, secretary general of the trade body for the Portuguese cycling sector - Portugal Bike Value - says the pandemic was the main driving force behind the industry’s continuing boom.”Covid brought a new opportunity to the sector, since it ended up incentivising healthier lifestyles [across Europe].” Mr Nadais adds that industry is expected to see total exports rise between 20% and 30% this year.
But have Portuguese people themselves got more into cycling since Covid? That does appear to be the case, even in the capital Lisbon and second city Porto, where people were traditionally seen as adverse to cycling due to the steep and often cobbled roads in both areas.
In Lisbon the use of bikes, including electric ones, to help get up all the hills, has risen by a quarter since the start of the pandemic, according to one report.
And Fernando Chicarini, the owner of Lisbon’s oldest bike shop - Armazéns Airaf, which was founded in 1951 - says his sales have soared by 40% since the start of the pandemic. He has also seen a big rise in the number of people wanting him to fix their old bikes.
“People who already owned bicycles, but didn’t use them regularly, or at all, showed up for repairs, revisions, and restorations,” he says.
Back at the Rodi parts factory, Mr Mendes says they sold 500,000 bike wheels and three million wheel rims in 2020, a combined 35% hike compared with 2019.
“We were lucky that those of us in the bicycle sector didn’t suffer as much as workers in other industries,” he adds.
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26/11/2021
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