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Sinterama, a specialist in polyester yarns
Sinterama offers specialist polyester yarns, serving the market for customised solutions.
Based in Italy, the group founded in 1968 has expanded to multiple global locations with a footprint in the UK, Bulgaria, Brazil, and China.
For Sinterama sustainability is a way of life. The company tries its best to reduce plastic in its manufacturing process, recycles its plastic bobbins, cartons and monitors its resource use – materials, fuel, energy. It works with clients on reusing packaging and encourages employees to use less plastic, not just at work but in their own homes as well. The company communicates with all stake holders – clients, suppliers, employees, associates – the importance of respecting the environment and using sustainability as the basic mantra in all their business practices.
Big brands with high visibility want to be seen using sustainable materials but they demand that the supply chain make it cost-neutral. So in effect the full additional cost burden of making a sustainable product is shifted to the supply chain’s shoulders. Big brands need to step forward and be willing to listen to the supply chain and participate in the cost burden. Asking suppliers to deliver a recycled yarn-based fabric or garment at no extra cost is in itself unsustainable. The challenge is finding big brands willing to accept cost-differentiation for recycled yarn based products.
Rise in Indian textile and apparel sales
For the nine month period India’s overall textile and apparel sales increased by nine per cent.
Ebitda increased by 17 per cent. Raw material cost saw an increase of eight per cent. While employee cost saw an increase of seven per cent, other costs also saw an increase of ten per cent for the same period.
For the top textile and apparel companies, there was an increase in overall sales and ebitda margins by nine per cent and 17 per cent, respectively.
India’s overall textile and apparel exports witnessed a growth of two per cent while apparel exports declined by eight per cent during the nine-month period. Meanwhile, textile and apparel imports rose five per cent with a significant 52 per cent rise in apparel imports.
Indian textile and apparel exports go to all countries including China. The recovery in the US economy has given a boost to India’s textile and apparel exports. Since the US economy is on a continuous growth path, India’s textile and apparel export growth is expected to continue. India registered a growth of 5.37 per cent in textile and apparel exports in 2017. India’s share in world trade in textile and clothing is estimated to be 4.95 per cent. With these exports, India is ranked second among suppliers in the world.
Researchers develop graphene yarn
Researchers at the University of Manchester have developed a method to produce scalable graphene-based yarn.
Multi-functional wearable e-textiles have been a focus of much attention due to their great potential for healthcare, sportswear, fitness and aerospace applications. Graphene has been considered a potentially good material for these types of applications due to its high conductivity, and flexibility. Every atom in graphene is exposed to its environment allowing it to sense changes in its surroundings, making it an ideal material for sensors. Smart wearable textiles have experienced a renaissance in recent years through the innovation and miniaturisation and wireless revolution.
There have been efforts to integrate textile-based sensors into garments. However, current manufacturing processes are complex and time consuming, expensive, and the materials used are non-biodegradable and use unstable metallic conductive materials. The new process has the potential to produce tons of conductive graphene-based yarn, using existing textile machineries and without adding to production costs. In addition to producing the yarn in large quantities, they are washable, flexible, inexpensive and biodegradable. Such sensors could be integrated to either a self-powered RFID or low-powered Bluetooth to send data wirelessly to mobile device.
High performance clothing is going through a transformation currently, thanks to recent innovations in textiles.
India: State CACP seeks hike in cotton MSP for 2019-20
The Maharashtra unit of the Commission on Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP) is seeking a 15 per cent increase in the minimum support price ( MSP) of cotton for the season of 2019-20.
The MSP for medium-staple variety of cotton is at Rs 5,150 per quintal, and that for long-staple is at Rs 5,450 per quintal, which are roughly equivalent to Rs 43,000-43,500 per candy (1 candy equals to 356 kg). The government had raised the MSP for cotton by 26 per cent this year. It was mulling to raise the MSP of cotton further.
The spot market prices of CAI for cotton of staple length 30 mm have dropped to Rs 42,100 per bale on March 1 from Rs 43,400 per bale on January 1. Prices of raw cotton are moving below the minimum support price levels.
The decline in the domestic prices has brought export parity, maintained traders. Prices are declining this season despite forecast of lower cotton production and higher exports figures for the first three months of cotton season that started in October.
Pakistan textile industry needs upgradation
Pakistan needs to improve cotton yields and increase the area under cultivation.
There is a crucial need for Pakistan’s textile industry to up its game where balancing modernisation and replacement as well as skill development are concerned.
The China Pakistan Economic Corridor is likely to result in improved energy supply for the industry, better internal connectivity and logistics as well as new international market linkages. Chinese businesses have shown interest in setting up joint ventures with local partners. But this will benefit only a handful of players given that the majority of the firms operating in Pakistan’s garment sector are small and medium enterprises, unable to invest at the scale Chinese companies usually operate at. However, technology and skills transfer is absolutely necessary and for that the presence of a high value added textile industry in Pakistan is a prerequisite. Detailed plans need to be made which take into account the strengths of Pakistan’s domestic industry and facilitate Chinese help in weaker areas especially technology.
Competition is on the rise in global apparel and textile markets and things are going to heat up even more. Countries like Vietnam, Cambodia and Sri Lanka have become the new disruptors and are vying to get a bigger share of the global textile pie.
Karl Mayer launches new platform for new developments
Karl Mayer has launched a new platform, Textile Makerspace, to bring together innovations from both areas. The platform aims to introduce new developments, such as the Textile Circuit.
Textile Circuit, the first topic to be covered by Textile Makerspace, demonstrates the possibilities of incorporating electrically conductive yarns into warp-knitted textiles directly on the machine. Functional elements, such as sensors, conductors and coils, can be incorporated very easily, without any additional production steps or compromising the textile characteristics.
This has led, for example, to the development of comfortable cuffs for controlling robots and textile charging stations for inductively charging smartphones.
Kingpins demands CSR conformity
Kingpins will ask denim spinners who exhibit at its next Amsterdam edition to comply with, or exceed, current CSR regulations relating to environmental protection and the use of chemicals.
The show’s goal is to become even more engaged in promoting environmental responsibility within the industry. Advise and support will be offered to exhibitors in order to help them transform their approach. Kingpins does not wish to introduce new certifications, but the organisers are keen to promote the strictest existing ones. Once they have drawn up a set of social responsibility specifications for exhibitors, they plan to share them with other textile shows, in order to promote collective change across the supply chain.
For the time being, the new exhibitor admission criteria are limited to the show’s Amsterdam edition, but the goal is to eventually apply them to the New York, Hong Kong and China shows too.
Both the denim supply chain and jeans manufacturers have been frequently singled out for their less than satisfactory environmental and human rights records. The accusations have mostly been leveled at workshops and factories outside the European Union, as European denim weavers and manufacturers are keen to emphasise that the EU already imposes CSR regulations.
Reed Exhibitions Japan introduces Fashion World Tokyo
Reed Exhibitions Japan has brought together a unique Japanese trade show, combing Fashion World Tokyo and Fashion World Tokyo –Factor, which satisfies fashion needs by gathering manufacturers in one place.
Fashion World Tokyo comprises separate shows divided by themed categories of fashion items Fashion Wear Expo, Bag Expo, Fashion Jewellery Expo and Shoes Expo and Fashion World Tokyo -Factory-, consisting of Textile Tokyo and Fashion Sourcing Tokyo, a gathering of popular fashion garments/textiles companies and fashion sourcing manufacturers. The on-site meeting provides good busRiness opportunities for exhibitors and visitors.
One of the features of Fashion World Tokyo is its focus on ‘the best business platform." The show managers have developed various kinds of approaches to make the show accessible and productive, such as introducing a "Matchmaking Service" and an online appointment platform.
New algorithm transforms 3D designs into instructions for knitting equipment
Researchers at Carnage Mellon University have written a sophisticated algorithm that can transform 3D designs into stitch-by-stitch instructions for industrial knitting equipment. The newfound discovery can aid textile manufacturers in producing custom sizes and designs at affordable costs. The algorithm breaks down 3D meshes into step by step instructions for V-bed knitting machines. With the algorithm, garment manufacturers with proficient designing knowledge would be able to input 3D designs or meshes as instruction for the machine to knit. The feature will, therefore, allow manufacturers to work without the requirement of expert knowledge of computer programming. The technology could pioneer the industry towards a new market for custom sized and designed apparel.
A flurry of advancements in technology is enabling textile manufacturers to continuously enhance the quality of their products. The novel loop transfer technology incorporated in circular knitting machines allows for the seamless transfer of stitches thereby enabling manufacturers to produce structured designs and shaped fabrics. Some other mechanisms and equipment that allow manufacturers to have more control over the quality of products are ultra-fine gauge circular knitting machine and pile and silver insertion mechanism. The new-age technology has allowed textile manufacturers to gain more control over the design, shape, and quality of the finished products.
Indorama acquires Invista Resins
Indorama Ventures has bought Invista Resins and Fibers.
The acquisition is aligned with IVL’s strategy to grow and support customers’ needs with differentiated solutions in both packaging and in industrial fibers. It provides Indorama with competitive advantages, obtaining the intellectual property rights of Polyshield and Oxyclear, Invista’s barrier technology, in all markets globally.
Polyshield and Oxyclear brands are known for their oxygen barrier packaging, mainly used by the food and beverage industry, to extend the shelf life of juice, wine, beer, diary as well as ketchup.
Indorama Ventures is a chemical producer. With additional tailwinds from strong volumes and industry supply tightness, due to financial problems being faced by certain competitors in Europe and America, the company has further grown its top line and margins. Meaningful developments in the PTA and PET businesses, the announced capital expenditure programs and the newly acquired businesses will all play a meaningful role in enhancing earnings growth in 2019 and beyond. Its strong performance demonstrates the resilience of its business portfolio, and the benefits of its uniquely diversified and integrated business model, which are clearly bearing fruit with increasing momentum.
The company is ranked among the top five chemical companies globally. The goal is to double ebitda every five years.












