Producer
Jinji Dyestuffs
Chinese reactive-dye producer with ~14% share.
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Inputs supplied
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Goods downstream
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Facilities
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Stories
What they make
1 input Jinji Dyestuffs supplies
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Where it shows up
Goods downstream
Essential goods that depend on something Jinji Dyestuffs makes — pick one to see the full supply chain.
What else they do
Business segments
The company's full revenue map — where this supply-chain role fits within their broader business.
Reactive dyes (cellulosic)
Dye intermediates
Intelligence
What's known
Sourced claims about this company's role in supply chains — chokepoints, concentration, incidents, dual-use connections.
Substitution2017
China's repeated environmental crackdowns structurally favour the big integrated dye makers over mid-tier producers like Jinji. Enforcement waves have penalized 80,000+ factories and shut 14,000+ outright, and smaller dye/intermediate plants — lacking captive intermediate supply and the capital to upgrade or relocate into approved chemical parks — are the ones idled or absorbed. The reactive-dye market therefore keeps concentrating rather than fragmenting: every environmental tightening consolidates share toward the leaders, making a ~14%-share producer exactly the tier most exposed to being squeezed out via shutdown or acquisition. [verify: 80k penalized/14k shut + Jinji ~14% reactive-dye share both confirmed]
Latham & Watkins ↗Concentration2024
[single-source] Reactive dyes are specifically the chemistry that colours cellulosic fibres — cotton, viscose/rayon and linen — bonding covalently to the fibre (where disperse dyes handle polyester). Jinji is one of the Chinese reactive-dye producers (~14% share cited) in a market dominated by a few Zhejiang players. So the colour of cotton and rayon clothing concentrates in a handful of Chinese reactive-dye makers — sitting directly downstream of the very viscose fibre (e.g. Sateri, Grasim) those dyes are formulated to colour, compounding China's grip on the apparel chain at the dyeing step as well as the fibre step. [verify: single-source but plausible; chemistry+China concentration real, ~14% Jinji share only in report-mills unverified]
Global Growth Insights ↗