gateway

FW

FW

  

Indias textile market nears Rs 15 lakh cr as domestic demand rewrites growth jpg

 

India’s textile and apparel economy is no longer being driven merely by population growth or festive consumption cycles. It is now being powered by a deeper lifestyle-led shift in household behaviour, rising discretionary spending, and the formalisation of multiple apparel use-cases across urban and rural India. The latest ‘Market for Textiles and Clothing: National Household Survey 2024’, released by Union Textiles Minister Giriraj Singh, places the country’s total textile market at Rs 14.95 lakh crore, underscoring the scale of the structural transition underway.

What is particularly significant is the speed of expansion. Since 2010, the market has seen a CAGR of 8.3 per cent, taking India into the league of large domestic consumption-driven textile economies. Industry leaders see this as the early phase of a larger consumption supercycle, with demand increasingly tied to premiumisation, functional clothing, hygiene products, and fashion versatility.

The market’s triple growth

The most striking takeaway from the survey is the widening gap between India’s textile production identity and its domestic consumption power. Of the Rs 14.95 lakh crore total market, the domestic component alone accounts for Rs 12.02 lakh crore, showing how India is rapidly emerging as its own strongest demand engine.

At the centre of this shift is household demand, which has touched Rs 8.77 lakh crore from Rs 4.18 lakh crore in 2010. This near doubling reflects more than just inflation-led ticket size increases. It signals a change in wardrobe composition: more garments per consumer, higher replacement cycles, and sharper segmentation between workwear, occasion wear, casualwear, activewear, and home utility textiles.

Table: Market evolution (2010 vs 2024)

Category

2010 (Rs cr)

2024 (Rs cr)

CAGR (%)

Overall Market Size

4.89 lakh

14.95 lakh

8.30%

Domestic Market Size

12.02 lakh

Household Demand

4.18 lakh

8.77 lakh

5.40%

Per Capita Demand

Rs 2,119

Rs 6,066

7.80%

The table clearly shows that India’s textile sector is as much about deeper wallet share as it is about broader consumer reach. Per capita spending has nearly tripled to Rs 6,066, revealing how clothing has evolved from basic necessity into a layered expression of lifestyle, aspiration, and functionality. This table is especially critical because it captures behavioural change at the household level, indicating that India’s fashion economy is moving up the value curve rather than merely expanding in volume.

Fiber rebalance, MMF tightens its grip

If the first phase of India’s textile growth was cotton-led, the next phase is increasingly being written by man-made fibres and blends. The 2024 survey shows MMF and blended textiles commanding 52.2 per cent of total demand, making synthetics the dominant consumption base.

This is an important shift because it aligns India’s domestic consumption patterns with global apparel manufacturing trends, where performance fabrics, easy-care materials, and price-efficient blends continue to gain share.

Table: Fiber consumption 2024

Fiber type

Market share (%)

2024 value (Rs cr)

CAGR (2010-24)

MMF & Blends

52.20%

4.47 lakh

8.28%

Cotton

41.20%

3.53 lakh

10.53%

Silk

5.20%

8.93%

Wool

1.30%

7.02%

The table suggests a complex fiber transition rather than a simple cotton-to-synthetics replacement. Cotton, despite supply-side limitations, has still clocked a 10.53 per cent CAGR to rs 3.53 lakh crore, indicating that premium natural fibres continue to hold value in ethnicwear, innerwear, and comfort-led categories. Yet MMF’s majority share is more important. It points to stronger demand visibility in sportswear, leggings, denim blends, technical wear, and affordable fashion essentials. For mills and apparel brands, this fibre mix evolution has direct implications for capacity planning, raw material sourcing, and margin architecture.

The new Indian wardrobe

The real engine behind this market growth lies in the fragmentation of clothing occasions. India’s wardrobe is becoming segmented by time, purpose, and identity. What was once a one-outfit day is now split into morning casuals, officewear, gymwear, evening comfortwear, and social dressing.

This behavioural change is visible in the gender demand split, with women accounting for 55.5 per cent of textile purchases against men’s 44.5 per cent. The differential is not merely demographic, it reflects the rise of occasion-based purchasing and higher wardrobe churn in women’s categories.

The strongest evidence comes from the rapid rise of versatile everyday staples. Men’s jeans and women’s leggings have emerged as the fastest-growing segments, reinforcing the de-formalisation of Indian dressing habits. Comfort, stretch, repeat utility, and affordability are increasingly defining category winners. This trend is especially relevant for listed fashion retailers and value brands, as it strengthens the long-term case for basics-led volume growth over seasonal fashion volatility.

Sustainability finds commercial scale

One of the most business-relevant developments in the survey is the emergence of sustainability as a measurable domestic market segment rather than an export-driven compliance narrative. India’s sustainable textile market has already reached Rs 37,000 crore, a scale large enough to influence capital allocation decisions across spinning, recycling, and branded retail.

The most telling insight is that 58 per cent of this segment comes from reused and retailored textiles. This shows circularity in India is being shaped less by premium ‘green’ branding and more by embedded consumer thrift, reuse culture, and secondary garment ecosystems. For the industry, this opens monetisation pathways in resale, fibre recycling, post-consumer waste management, and recycled polyester value chains, especially relevant as global buyers tighten ESG-linked sourcing mandates.

Rural India’s quiet technical textile boom

Beyond fashion, the survey reveals a major pattern in technical textiles. Categories such as masks, diapers, sanitary napkins, and hygiene-linked disposables are seeing stronger rural consumption than urban demand, with rural households contributing 58 per cent of category offtake versus 42 per cent from cities. This is a significant economic signal. It suggests that public health schemes, rising awareness, and improved rural distribution are converting into durable consumption behaviour. For technical textile manufacturers, the demand curve is no longer institution-led alone; it is increasingly household-led and rural in character. The implications extend well beyond textiles into FMCG-style distribution models, healthcare retail, and last-mile penetration economics.

Domestic demand becomes the industry’s new anchor

The bigger story behind the Rs 14.95 lakh crore market is strategic: India’s textile industry is no longer dependent solely on export cycles for growth visibility. A Rs 12.02 lakh crore domestic market offers an internal demand cushion large enough to absorb global volatility, fashion seasonality, and fibre price swings.

As the middle class grows and clothing use-cases multiply, the sector is entering a new decade where consumption growth will be driven by versatility, sustainability, and technical functionality. The Indian textile value chain is no longer just producing for the world; it is increasingly producing for a fast-evolving domestic consumer who demands more occasions, more comfort, and more utility from every thread.

  

China Discounts Bangladesh Bleeds Inside Europes new apparel sourcing crisis

 

Europe’s fashion imports opened 2026 with a hard jolt. Fresh Eurostat-linked trade data for January shows the European Union’s apparel imports shrinking 15.48 per cent year-on-year to €7.03 billion, a dip sharp enough to redraw sourcing equations from Dhaka to Dongguan. The decline is not merely a weak seasonal print. It reflects a change in the world’s most influential apparel consumption bloc, where demand fragility, inflation fatigue, and a more disciplined retail inventory cycle are hitting at once.

The numbers underneath the headline make the downturn even more telling. Import volume fell 8.36 per cent to 377.45 million kg, while average unit prices slipped 7.76 per cent to €18.63 per kg. In practical terms, Europe bought less clothing and paid less for every kg it bought. That twin decline has transformed January’s data into an early referendum on how global sourcing strategies will evolve through the rest of 2026.

This comes against a wider backdrop of lower EU goods trade, with Eurostat’s broader January release also showing extra-EU imports down 9.5 per cent across categories. Apparel, however, is proving especially exposed because it sits at the intersection of discretionary spending and markdown-driven retail behavior.

One market, five very different strategies

The performance table reveals a market no longer moving in one direction, but splintering into sharply distinct supplier playbooks.

Table: EU apparel import performance (Jan 2026 vs Jan 2025)

Country

Value (€ mn)

Growth value

Volume growth (kg)

Unit price growth

World

7,033.60

-15.48%

-8.36%

-7.76%

China

2,224.89

-6.90%

+1.21%

-8.01%

Bangladesh

1,428.91

-25.25%

-17.49%

-9.41%

Turkey

619.98

-29.12%

-31.66%

+3.72%

Vietnam

362.86

-7.34%

-13.00%

+6.50%

Pakistan

288.81

-17.06%

+49.01%

-44.34%

At the global level, the €7.03 billion import base confirms a demand-led correction. Yet once the lens shifts to the leading exporters, the table becomes a map of strategic divergence. China, still dominant at €2.22 billion, lost only 6.90 per cent in value despite the market’s broader collapse. The reason sits clearly in the volume column: a 1.21 per cent increase. China is effectively using price as a weapon, sacrificing 8.01 per cent in unit price to preserve throughput, keep factories loaded, and defend share in Europe’s core value segment.

Bangladesh’s is the most alarming among the major sourcing hubs. Its exports dropped to €1.43 billion, down 25.25 per cent, with volume down 17.49 per cent and prices down 9.41 per cent. Unlike China, Bangladesh could not convert lower prices into higher shipment flow. The table therefore suggests not just weaker European demand, but a loss of elasticity in Bangladesh’s basic-garment-heavy export basket. This is what makes the decline strategic rather than cyclical: lower prices are no longer automatically reviving orders.

Turkey’s line item introduces a different signal. Export value fell 29.12 per cent and volume crashed 31.66 per cent, but unit prices rose 3.72 per cent. That pricing resilience implies a conscious premiumization strategy. Turkish manufacturers appear to be giving up low-value replenishment business in favor of faster-turn, design-sensitive, and nearshore premium categories where lead time matters more than absolute cost.

Vietnam’s data supports the same thesis. A smaller 7.34 per cent value decline, paired with a 6.50 per cent rise in unit prices, suggests a successful migration toward performance wear, technical apparel, and higher-spec categories that are less exposed to Europe’s discount wars.

Pakistan has shown the clearest signal of distress in the entire market. A 49.01 per cent rise in shipment volume would ordinarily indicate a breakout export story. But the adjacent price column rewrites that narrative. Unit prices fell 44.34 per cent, pushing average realization down to just €7.12 per kg. As a result, total export value still fell 17.06 per cent.

In business terms, this is not growth; it is distress-led throughput. Pakistani suppliers appear to be liquidating capacity into Europe’s extreme-value tier, prioritizing cash flow and machine utilization over margin preservation. The table therefore exposes a dangerous trade-off increasingly common across South Asian manufacturing: volume expansion without pricing power can worsen profitability even when order books appear full.

This anomaly matters beyond Pakistan because it shows where Europe’s mass-market retailers are still spending, ultra-low-cost basics, promotional bundles, and short-life seasonal inventory. The question is whether such business is economically sustainable once compliance, freight volatility, and sustainability costs are layered in.

The new competitive map

The January data effectively divides the sourcing world into three camps. The first is the scale-driven discount bloc, led by China and increasingly mirrored by Pakistan. These exporters are using aggressive pricing to protect utilization rates and prevent order migration. This strategy works best for countries with deep vertical integration, raw material access, and enough financial resilience to absorb margin pain.

The second is the value-added migration bloc, represented by Turkey and Vietnam. Their positive unit-price growth suggests they are monetizing speed, quality, compliance, and product sophistication rather than competing in commodity basics. As EU retailers become more selective, this cohort may gain disproportionate wallet share despite weaker total market growth.

The third is the squeezed middle, where Bangladesh and Sri Lanka increasingly sit. These hubs remain heavily exposed to the mid-price essentials segment, the very category being hollowed out by both Chinese discounting and weakening European consumer appetite. This is where business significance becomes profound: the middle of the global apparel market is disappearing faster than either the luxury edge or the ultra-value basement.

Why Europe’s slowdown is becoming structural

The immediate trigger is lower consumer demand, but the deeper forces are more structural. Europe imported €180.5 billion worth of apparel in 2024, yet growth has increasingly shifted toward sustainability-led and circular fashion models. Recent EU market studies show rising preference for durable, compliant, and traceable garments over disposable fast fashion. That transition is now intersecting with Green Deal-linked textile waste rules, ESG disclosure requirements, and mounting retailer pressure to reduce deadstock. The result is fewer speculative buys, tighter reorder cycles, and more supplier scrutiny.

For manufacturers, this means the 2026 battle is no longer simply about FOB price. The new margin stack includes recyclability, traceability, lower carbon logistics, and smaller but faster replenishment cycles. Suppliers unable to monetize those capabilities are being pushed into pure price competition, a game only the largest and most efficient can survive.

The second-half 2026 test

The rest of 2026 will likely be defined by consolidation rather than recovery. Europe’s retailers are entering the year with cautious inventory discipline, and the broader EU goods-import slowdown suggests the pressure is macro as much as category-specific. The winning exporters will be those that can sit confidently at one of two extremes: the cheapest acceptable product or the most defensible premium proposition.

Everyone in between faces a brutal squeeze. January’s table, therefore, is more than a weak monthly trade print. It is an x-ray of a global sourcing industry losing its middle layer. The next phase of apparel trade will belong not to the biggest producers alone, but to those who can prove either ruthless cost efficiency or unmistakable product value.

  

Geopolitical volatility triggers sharp decline in global textile confidence Survey jpg

 

The global textile industry is grappling with a sudden and severe downturn in sentiment as regional conflicts disrupt essential trade routes and energy markets. According to the 37th Global Textile Industry Survey by the International Textile Manufacturers Federation (ITMF), the business situation balance has plunged to -25 percentage points. This decline is largely attributed to the escalating conflict involving the US, Israel, and Iran, which has revived stagflation fears reminiscent of the 2022 energy shocks. While Africa remains a rare bright spot of stability, North and Central America have experienced the most significant contraction in business conditions.

Energy security and logistics disruptions reshape industry risk

For the first time in recent history, geopolitical instability has overtaken weak consumer demand as the primary concern for textile executives, cited by 50 per cent of survey respondents. The blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has sent shockwaves through the supply chain, driving up raw material costs and complicating logistics. Consequently, global business expectations have collapsed from a robust +23 percentage points to just +5—the lowest level recorded since late 2022. While brands and retailers maintain a cautious optimism, the outlook for upstream manufacturers, particularly weavers, knitters, and machinery producers, has turned deeply negative.

Strategic diversification amid rising operational costs

In response to these external pressures, the industry is pivoting toward market diversification to reduce over-reliance on the US market. Manufacturers are currently prioritizing internal cost absorption over large-scale capital investments or production relocation. Interestingly, as energy and security concerns dominate the narrative, the anxiety surrounding trade tariffs has diminished significantly, falling from 31 per cent to 13 per cent. This shift underscores a fundamental realignment where immediate physical and economic security now outweighs traditional regulatory or protectionist hurdles in the global textile world.

  

The Navi Mumbai Municipal Corporation (NMMC) has institutionalized India’s first Municipal Textile Recovery Facility (TRF) in Belapur, establishing a blueprint for urban fiber circularity under the Swachh Bharat Mission-Urban 2.0.

As of April 2026, the facility has successfully diverted 30 metric tons of post-consumer textile waste from landfills, leveraging a network of 140 dedicated collection bins across the city’s residential zones. This initiative addresses a critical gap in the domestic apparel value chain, where India generates approximately 7.8 million tons of textile waste annually. By utilizing handheld infrared scanners for precise fiber identification - distinguishing cotton, polyester, and wool blends - the TRF ensures high-purity feedstock for subsequent mechanical recycling and upcycling processes.

+3 This structured recovery model significantly boosts the regional textile economy by formalizing the collection of secondary raw materials. Strategic collaborations with women-led Self-Help Groups (SHGs) have already integrated over 150 practitioners into the green economy, with individual monthly earnings ranging between Rs 9,000 and Rs 15,000. The TRF is not merely a waste management site; it is a critical infrastructure for the future of sustainable apparel sourcing, noted a senior urban development official. Beyond traditional upcycling, the facility is pioneering high-value industrial applications, including the production of paper from rejected textile fibers. With plans to establish a permanent, high-capacity site in Koparkhairane, Navi Mumbai is effectively transitioning urban waste into a predictable resource stream for the textile manufacturing sector.

The Navi Mumbai Municipal Corporation oversees the administration and infrastructure of the planned city, focusing on sustainable urban development and sanitation. Key initiatives include decentralized waste processing and community-led circular economy projects. The corporation aims to scale its green initiatives citywide to maintain its top-tier ranking in national cleanliness surveys while fostering local employment through environmental stewardship.

  

Jack & Jones has officially inaugurated its first multi-brand concept store in France, marking a strategic shift toward family-oriented lifestyle retail. Having debuted in the first week of April 2026, the flagship location integrates the established menswear label with its rapidly growing womenswear counterpart, JJXX. This expansion reflects a broader European rollout by the Bestseller group, following successful pilot launches in London and Belgium. By consolidating denim expertise and trend-forward feminine silhouettes under one roof, the retailer is effectively targeting a ‘lifestyle-centric’ demographic, moving beyond its traditional menswear stronghold to capture a larger share of the diverse French apparel market.

Diversifying revenue streams via womenswear integration

The introduction of the ‘duo-brand’ format is a direct response to the 12 per cent rise in demand for integrated shopping environments that cater to multiple household segments simultaneously. While Jack & Jones has dominated the masculine denim sector for decades, the inclusion of JJXX allows the brand to tap into a high-growth category characterized by 20 per cent faster inventory turnover. The French consumer is increasingly looking for a curated, one-stop destination that balances durability with contemporary flair, noted a regional retail director during the store’s opening. The location features an updated experiential layout, prioritizing modular displays that can be adjusted to reflect real-time consumer data and seasonal trend shifts

Scaling retail resilience in competitive hubs

As part of Bestseller’s 2026 ‘Smart Growth’ roadmap, the French expansion addresses the rising operational costs of standalone boutiques by optimizing floor space productivity. The move coincides with the group’s record-breaking fiscal performance, with net turnover reaching DKK 38.1 billion in the 2024/25 period. By leveraging a centralized logistics network, Jack & Jones ensures that the new French hub remains ‘Never Out of Stock’ (NOOS) on high-volume essentials. This multi-brand strategy not only hedges against fluctuations in the menswear sector but also positions the brand to compete more aggressively with global fast-fashion conglomerates by offering a specialized, denim-centric alternative.

A global fashion conglomerate based in Denmark, Bestseller manages over 20 brands including Jack & Jones, Vero Moda, and JJXX. The company operates in 70 markets through 3,100 branded stores and 16,500 multi-brand retailers. Under its 2026 expansion plan, the group is prioritizing omnichannel integration and sustainable material sourcing to maintain its premium market positioning.

  

India’s domestic textile and apparel market has undergone a massive structural expansion, tripling in value over the last 15 years to reach approximately Rs 14.95 lakh crore in 2024. According to the ‘Market for Textiles and Clothing: National Household Survey 2024’ released by the Ministry of Textiles on April 6, 2026, the sector’s growth is fundamentally anchored by a sharp rise in individual consumption. Per capita demand for textiles has increased from Rs 2,119 in 2010 to Rs 6,066 in 2024, representing a CAGR of 7.8 per cent. This trajectory highlights a significant shift in consumer behavior, moving from basic necessity to diverse fashion and functional requirements across both urban and rural landscapes.

The growth is largely credited to a 52.2 per cent market dominance by Man-Made Fiber (MMF) and blended products, which have outpaced traditional cotton in volume growth due to their durability and competitive pricing. However, cotton remains a vital pillar with a 10.53 per cent CAGR, reaching an aggregate demand of Rs 3.53 lakh crore. Notably, the report identifies women as the primary drivers of this retail boom, accounting for 55.5 per cent of all textile purchases. As the industry advances into the FY26-27, the emphasis has pivoted toward circularity, with sustainable and recycled textiles now forming a Rs 37,000 crore sub-sector. Government-backed initiatives, including the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme and the development of PM MITRA parks, are further aligning domestic capacity with this burgeoning internal demand.

The Ministry of Textiles is a central government body responsible for policy formulation, planning, and export promotion for the Indian textile industry. It oversees the entire value chain from natural and man-made fibers to garments and technical textiles. The Ministry currently focuses on modernizing infrastructure and achieving a US$ 350 billion market size by 2030.

  

The Government of India plans to fast-track growth in the technical textiles sector by expanding the Rs 10,683 crore Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme for textiles. The expansion includes integration of 17 new product categories including a wider array of Man-Made Fiber (MMF) apparel and specialized technical textiles. Confirming the development, Giriraj Singh, Union Minister for Textiles, emphasizes a strategic shift toward high-value manufacturing segments. To facilitate broader participation from mid-sized enterprises, the ministry has reduced the minimum investment threshold by 50 per cent and lowered incremental turnover requirements from 25 per cent to 10 per cent.

Strengthening industrial capacity through fiscal calibration

This policy revision addresses long-standing industry requests for a more inclusive framework, particularly as India aims for a US$ 350 billion textile market by 2030. As of late 2025, the scheme has already attracted 84 new proposals envisaging investments of Rs 10,789 crore. By including niche segments like geo-textiles and medical textiles, the government intends to reduce import dependency and capitalize on the 8.3 per cent CAGR observed in domestic consumption. Industry experts suggest, the integration of these products will shield manufacturers from the volatility seen in traditional cotton cycles, providing a stable fiscal environment for long-term capital expenditure.

Enhancing global competitiveness amidst trade shifts

The expansion coincides with the operationalization of PM MITRA parks across seven states, creating a synergistic ecosystem for large-scale manufacturing. With India’s textile exports reaching US$ 37.75 billion in FY25, the upgraded PLI 2.0 is expected to generate approximately 86,740 new jobs while positioning the nation as a viable alternative to East Asian manufacturing hubs. While the 11 per cent import duty on certain fibers remains a challenge, the move toward ‘Kasturi Cotton’ and MMF diversification is designed to ensure that Indian garments maintain price parity in the U.S. and EU markets, even amidst fluctuating global logistics costs.

An apex federal body in India responsible for policy formulation and infrastructure development across the textile value chain, the Ministry of Textiles manages key initiatives like the PLI scheme and PM MITRA parks to boost exports and employment. Historically a cotton-centric regulator, the Ministry is currently driving a transition toward synthetic fibers and sustainable manufacturing.

  

India's textile and apparel value chain is poised for a significant raw material boost, with the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) projecting a 7 per cent increase in cotton production for the 2026-27 marketing season. Total output is estimated to reach 25.2 million bales (480 lb), a recovery underpinned by a projected 3 per cent expansion in cultivation area to 11.5 million hectares. This upward trend reflects renewed farmer confidence following the stabilization of domestic market prices and the anticipation of a favorable monsoon season.

Strengthening vertical integration and export viability

The projected surplus comes at an opportune time for garment manufacturers who are navigating a 12 per cent rise in operational logistics. With domestic consumption expected to climb by 3 per cent to 25.8 million tons, the industry is increasingly retaining fiber for value-added downstream processing rather than raw exports. This shift aligns with recent Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) that have enhanced India’s competitive standing in the U.S. and European retail markets. The availability of a steady domestic crop ensures that our mills can maintain consistent pricing for global apparel brands, effectively hedging against international fiber volatility, noted a senior textile analyst.

Strategic transition to high-margin apparel

While raw cotton exports are forecast to soften to 1.2 million bales due to increased domestic absorption, the focus has moved toward ‘Kasturi Cotton Bharat’ branding to secure premium positioning. The decline in imports - projected to drop 25 per cent - highlights a growing self-reliance in long-staple varieties, supported by the government's 11 per cent import duty reinstated in early 2026. This environment provides a stable foundation for the apparel sector to transition from mass-market production into high-margin, ethically sourced garments, catering to the rising global demand for traceable and sustainable fashion.

A cornerstone of the national economy, the Indian textile sector contributes approximately 2 per cent to the GDP and supports over 45 million livelihoods. As the world’s largest cotton producer by acreage, the sector is currently undergoing a digital and sustainable modernization phase, boosted by a US$ 630 million (Rs 5,272 crore) budgetary allocation for 2026.

  

The European nonwovens industry is navigating a period of recalibration as newly released data for 2025 reveals a 2.2 per cent decline in total production volume. According to figures published by EDANA on April 7, 2026, the region’s output fell to 2,919,000 tons, a downturn driven by softening demand in traditional sectors and intensifying pressure from international competitors. This contraction signals a cooling of the market following years of post-pandemic fluctuations, forcing manufacturers to pivot toward specialized high-growth processes.

Divergent growth in specialized manufacturing processes

While the headline figure suggests a broad slowdown, the industry is witnessing a significant decoupling of manufacturing technologies. The backbone of high-volume synthetic fabrics - Spunmelt production - bore the brunt of the downturn with a 3.3 per cent decline. Conversely, specialized bonding techniques showed marginal gains; needle-punched and hydroentangled processes grew by 0.8 per cent and 0.1 per cent, respectively. These figures indicate a strategic move toward durable and niche applications, even as the standard drylaid technology remained largely stagnant with a minor 0.7 per cent decline.

Consumer market shifts and industrial volatility

The decline in the hygiene sector, historically the industry's most reliable volume driver, was particularly notable. After growing in 2024, the hygiene market contracted by 2.7 per cent in 2025, largely due to a cooling baby diaper segment. The industrial landscape mirrored this volatility, with construction and upholstery nonwovens declining by 6.8 per cent and 7.1 per cent. However, the personal care wipes segment remained a rare bright spot, posting a 0.9 per cent increase in roll goods sales. This mixed performance underscores a broader economic environment where the European industry must rely on flexibility and innovation to maintain its market positioning against global headwinds.

  

The technical textile industry is witnessing an accelerated shift toward high-performance, bio-based chemistry as manufacturers seek to align with rigorous European environmental mandates. At Techtextil 2026 in Frankfurt, DyStar has introduced a new suite of specialized dyes and finishing agents designed for extreme functional requirements. The launch, occurring amidst a broader 8.3 per cent growth in the global technical textiles segment, features the Evo Protect series - a range of PFC-free and bio-based water repellents. These innovations target the automotive and protective workwear sectors, where the demand for durable, non-toxic finishes has intensified due to evolving REACH regulations and the European Union's 2026 strategic autonomy goals for defense and safety textiles.

Advancing performance through molecular innovation

As manufacturers face a 12 per cent increase in chemical procurement costs, the focus has moved toward ‘efficiency-in-application\’ technologies. DyStar’s latest Dianix Black XF3 300 per cent disperse dyes address this by offering high wet fastness at lower concentrations, effectively reducing water and energy consumption during the dyeing cycle. This development is critical for the high-visibility and military textile markets, which require infrared-stable solutions that do not compromise fiber integrity. Our objective is to decouple performance from fossil-fuel reliance, stated a senior marketing official at the event, noting that the integration of digital camouflage inks and high-fastness pigments allows for a 15 per cent reduction in process-related waste.

Resilience in specialty chemicals amidst market transition

The consolidation of manufacturing operations in the Americas and the transition to full ownership by the Zhejiang Longsheng Group have streamlined DyStar’s global sales structure, enabling faster deployment of specialty auxiliaries to emerging technical textile hubs. While the broader apparel sector experiences softness, the technical branch - encompassing medical, geo-, and agro-textiles - remains a growth engine. By leveraging its ‘Econogy’ auditing services, the company is positioning itself as a strategic partner for manufacturers navigating the shift toward circular fiber systems. This proactive alignment with the 2026 ‘Nature Performance’ trends ensures that DyStar remains central to the textile value chain’s migration from commodity products to high-margin, engineered materials.

DyStar is a leading global specialty chemical manufacturer specializing in colorants, auxiliaries, and sustainable textile solutions. Serving the automotive, protective wear, and home textile sectors, the company operates across 50 countries with a focus on RSL-compliant processes. Following its 2025 reorganization, DyStar is expanding its bio-based product portfolio to drive long-term profitability in the green chemistry market.

Page 1 of 3842