China’s pulp and paper industry continues to expand at an unprecedented pace, with new mill projects, advanced technologies, and state-backed financing driving record output. What began as a push to meet domestic demand has now evolved into an era of overcapacity and a structural imbalance that is reshaping trade dynamics, pricing strategies, and sustainability priorities worldwide.
This expansion has far-reaching effects: global producers are contending with lower-priced exports, disrupted supply chains, and a shifting balance of power that challenges traditional market leaders in North America and Europe.
Several key factors underpin this transformation:
These dynamics are not only reshaping regional competitiveness but also redefining the global pulp and paper trade.
As China’s domestic market reaches saturation, excess capacity is being redirected toward export markets. This has disrupted global price stability, particularly in Asia-Pacific, Europe, and Latin America, where local producers are struggling to compete against lower-priced Chinese products. For pulp suppliers, China’s growing self-sufficiency is altering traditional fiber trade routes — challenging exporters in North America and the Nordics to find new markets and adjust strategies.
China’s overcapacity is not without environmental cost. The country’s reliance on imported wood fiber, chemical inputs, and energy raises concerns about sustainability and resource efficiency. Additionally, the push to maintain mill utilization rates often results in production continuing even when margins shrink, exacerbating both market volatility and ecological stress.
Industry observers expect consolidation in China’s pulp and paper sector, as smaller and less efficient mills struggle to survive. Strategic investments in transparency, benchmarking, and efficiency will be crucial for staying competitive in a tightening global market.
For a deep dive into these developments, join Matt Elhardt, Chief Revenue Officer at ResourceWise, for the upcoming webinar “China’s Pulp and Paper Boom: How Overcapacity Is Reshaping Global Trade,” on October 29, 2025, at 2:00 PM EDT (6:00 PM UTC).
Reserve your spot now to gain expert insights into how overcapacity is redefining global supply chains, fiber markets, and competitive positioning.