LUSA 06/09/2026

Lusa - Business News - Portugal: Footwear firms in Brussels as model for European reindustrialisation

Porto, June 8, 2026 (Lusa) - The Portuguese footwear industry will present itself in Brussels on 16 June as a model to follow in the reindustrialisation of Europe, in a sector where 88% of the 24 billion pairs of shoes produced annually originate in Asia.

“In recent decades, the national footwear sector has established itself as an international benchmark based on quality, expertise, design and technological innovation. Now, it aims to demonstrate that it is possible to manufacture in Europe, create value and compete on a global scale,” highlights the Portuguese Association of Footwear, Components, Leather Goods and Substitutes Manufacturers (APICCAPS).

In this context, APICCAPS and the Portuguese Footwear Technology Centre, with the support of the Permanent Representation of Portugal to the European Union (Reper) and the European Footwear Industry Confederation (CEC), propose to present the national industry as “a case study”, at a session to be held on 16 June in Brussels, bringing together European policy-makers to discuss “a model of reindustrialisation based on innovation, sustainability and local production”.

The session will take place at Reper and will bring together MEPs, institutional leaders, businesspeople, and European partners to discuss the future of European industry “in a context marked by profound geopolitical, economic and environmental transformations”, with over a hundred participants expected.

As highlighted by APICCAPS, the national industry is heading to Brussels “to assert a clear conviction: Europe will be more competitive, resilient and sustainable when it returns to manufacturing”.

“In a global market where more than 24 billion pairs of shoes are produced annually, of which around 88% originate in Asia, Europe has the opportunity to regain production capacity and strengthen the autonomy of its value chains. It is in this context that Portugal presents itself as a case study,” it emphasises.

Quoted in a press release, the president of APICCAPS said that “it is possible to manufacture high-quality footwear in Europe in a sustainable, innovative and economically viable manner”.

“We believe that the industry has a central role to play in the future of the European project and we want to contribute actively to this debate,” Luís Onofre said.

In this regard, APICCAPS highlights that, over the last three years, the Portuguese footwear sector has made “the largest collective investment in its history”, mobilising over €100 million under the Recovery and Resilience Plan (RRP) to “prepare the industry for a new generation of challenges, accelerating the digital and environmental transition”.

Among the most emblematic projects is BioShoes4All, an initiative worth around €70 million involving more than 60 partners – including companies, universities and technology centres – which aims to transform the footwear value chain through the development of biomaterials, the digitalisation of production processes, the recovery of waste and the promotion of circular economy models.

Onofre said the debate on European industry is now a strategic issue: “We continue to believe in the future of industrial production in Europe. Reindustrialisation requires a clear vision, consistent policies and fair competitive conditions on a global scale,” he added.

Focused on reinforcing, at the session on 16 June in Brussels, the message that “Europe needs an ambitious industrial policy, capable of promoting local production, stimulating innovation and building more resilient, sustainable and competitive value chains”, APICCAPS says “the Portuguese footwear sector wants to be at the forefront of this transformation”.

PD/ADB // ADB.

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