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Textiles Recycling Expo USA concludes with industrial-scale recovery for the apparel sector
The successful conclusion of the inaugural Textiles Recycling Expo USA in Charlotte signals a definitive transition for the domestic apparel sector, moving beyond experimental pilots toward industrial-scale recovery. With nearly 1,900 industry stakeholders convening, the focus has shifted to the immediate necessity of localized supply chains. Industry data indicates, the United States currently generates approximately 17 million tons of textile waste annually, yet recycling rates remain stalled below 15 per cent. The North Carolina summit proved that the infrastructure for a circular economy is no longer a peripheral ambition but a core commercial requirement, says Marcus Greene, Senior Analyst, Industrial Sustainability. The growth in participation reflects a broader urgency to stabilize domestic feedstock as global export regulations on post-consumer waste tighten.
Scaling infrastructure amid regulatory evolution
Operationalizing these recycling targets requires navigating significant logistical hurdles, specifically the high cost of automated sorting and fiber separation. However, the emergence of ninety-five specialized exhibitors showcasing chemical recycling breakthroughs suggests, the technical gap is narrowing. By integrating advanced molecular recycling, manufacturers are now positioned to transform blended polyester-cotton garments - historically a landfill staple - into virgin-quality fibers. This technological maturation coincides with proposed Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) legislation in several states, which will likely mandate that brands fund the end-of-life processing of their products. As companies face these looming compliance costs, the investment in domestic recycling hubs offers a pragmatic pathway to mitigate long-term financial risk while securing a sustainable material pipeline.
Circular economy transitions
Applied Market Information (AMI) facilitates industrial growth through high-level technical conferences and market intelligence for the global plastics and textile sectors. Operating across key hubs in Europe and North America, AMI focuses on circular economy transitions. The firm projects robust expansion as it integrates recycling-specific exhibitions into its international portfolio to drive downstream value.
Lenzing navigates market volatility with structural shift
The Lenzing Group has successfully transitioned back to profitability in Q1, FY26, recording a net profit of €24 million. This achievement follows three consecutive loss-making quarters in 2025 and signals the effectiveness of the group’s ‘Performance Program.’ While consolidated revenue experienced a 10.8 per cent Y-o-Y decline to €615.7 million - primarily due to softer pulp prices and strategic production curtailments - the company’s EBITDA stood at a resilient €116.3 million. This operational stability is largely attributed to disciplined pricing and the realization of over €200 million in cost savings during the previous fiscal year.
Advancing the premiumization strategy
Lenzing is intensifying its focus on high-margin specialty fibers to insulate itself from the price volatility of generic commodities. A significant milestone in this transition is the recent majority acquisition of TreeToTextile AB, a move designed to boost Lenzing’s portfolio in next-generation sustainable fibers. Despite a downward revision in global growth forecasts to 3.1 per cent for 2026, Lenzing’s free cash flow more than doubled to €33.8 million in Q1. The significant improvement in free cash flow demonstrates that our structural measures are taking effect, noted Mathias Breuer, CFO, Lenzing Group.
Navigating supply chain and cost pressures
The textile industry continues to face headwinds from elevated energy and logistics costs, alongside geopolitical uncertainties. To counter these pressures, Lenzing is implementing a further cost-optimization plan aimed at achieving an additional €45 million in annual savings by 2027. This includes a workforce reduction of approximately 600 positions in Austria to streamline core processes. By focusing on North American and Asian market expansion, the group aims to mitigate the impact of sluggish European demand and maintain its trajectory toward a debt-free, high-margin business model.
Sustainable fiber innovation
Lenzing Group is a global leader in the production of wood-based cellulosic fibers, primarily serving the fashion and hygiene sectors under brands like Tencel and Veocel. Headquartered in Austria, the company is executing a transformation strategy focused on premiumization and achieving net-zero emissions by 2050.
BGMEA partners CNTAC to address annual import bill for woven fabrics
The Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) has initiated a high-level strategic partnership with the China National Textile and Apparel Council (CNTAC) to address the country’s $8–9 billion annual import bill for woven fabrics. This collaboration, formalized during an April 2026 summit in Dhaka, focuses on diverting Chinese capital into domestic man-made fiber (MMF) and technical textile production. By localizing these high-value segments, Bangladesh aims to transition from its traditional cotton-heavy reliance to a sophisticated synthetic-led portfolio, targeting a 40 per cent MMF production share by 2030.
Duty-free synergy via the Japan-Bangladesh EPA
A primary catalyst for this bilateral engagement is the newly operational Japan-Bangladesh Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA). Under this pact, Chinese-invested facilities in Bangladesh can utilize ‘single-stage transformation’ rules to secure 100 per cent duty-free access to the Japanese market. This is a transformative window for Chinese entrepreneurs to establish independent or joint ventures, noted Mahmud Hasan Khan, President, BGMEA. This strategic alignment provides a vital hedge against tariff risks as Bangladesh prepares for its 2026 graduation from Least Developed Country (LDC) status.
Technological integration and sustainable benchmarks
Beyond capital, the partnership prioritizes technology transfer in digital printing and eco-friendly dyeing. With global retailers mandating a 50 per cent renewable energy threshold by 2027, the Chinese delegation- comprising leaders from top-tier chemical and finishing firms - is auditing local mills to implement zero-liquid-discharge (ZLD) systems. This integration is essential to maintaining regional competitiveness against Vietnam, particularly as Bangladesh pursues an ambitious $100 billion apparel export target by 2035.
The BGMEA is the apex trade body representing over 4,500 garment manufacturers, steering an industry that contributes 83 per cent of Bangladesh's total export earnings. Following a 14 per cent revenue growth in FY26, the association is prioritizing high-margin synthetic apparel and green manufacturing. With a projected 2026 market size of $41.76 billion, BGMEA is aggressively expanding its footprint in the EU and East Asian corridors.
Redefining what responsible production looks like

India's textile and apparel sector has set the global benchmark for sustainability at scale, and two clusters are leading the way.
Over 700 dyeing units now operate under Zero Liquid Discharge systems, channelling effluent through 20 Common Effluent Treatment Plantsppur and Panipat represent two of the most instructive examples of industrial sustainability anywhere in the world. What they have achieved in water recycling and material circularity is structural, verified, and at scale: precisely the kind of evidence that global buyers are now prioritising when making long-term sourcing decisions.
Tiruppur: Significance of zero liquid discharge actually means scale
Tiruppur offers the most compelling proof point in global textile sustainability. Over 700 dyeing units now operate under Zero Liquid Discharge systems, channelling effluent through 20 Common Effluent Treatment Plants that collectively treat and recycle 130 million litres of wastewater every day. The cluster recovers 92-95 per cent of all industrial effluent: a figure that would be remarkable for any single facility, let alone an entire export hub.
Recycled water costs less than fresh water supply, and salt recovery from the treatment process adds further savings. Sustainability here is not a compliance exercise, but a commercial preference. Tiruppur accounts for over 54 per cent of India's total knitwear exports, which means a cluster of genuine global scale has made near-total water recycling its default operating model, not because it was the right thing to do, but because it made financial sense to do it.
Scale, circularity, and commercial logic together are reshaping how the global sourcing community thinks about India.
Panipat: Circularity that predates the conversation
Panipat processes over one lakh tons of discarded textile waste every year, post-consumer garments from the US, UK, Canada, Europe, Japan, and Korea, converting them into yarn, blankets, floor coverings, and industrial products. Approximately 250 tonnes flows in every day. The cluster's annual turnover stands at approximately USD 5.3 billion, with USD 1.3 billion from exports, and it employs around 1 million workers directly and indirectly.
Panipat cluster has moved well beyond traditional recycling. Chemical recycling units produce hybrid yarns that meet European quality standards, while high-speed shuttle-less looms weave them to specification.
The international and domestic framework
India's circular transition has significant multilateral backing. The InTex India programme: a four-year UNEP-Ministry of Textiles collaboration (2023-2027), is embedding life cycle assessment tools and Product Environmental Footprint methodology directly into SME clusters in Surat, Karur, Salem, Dindigul, and Perundurai.
The European Union has matched this multilateral commitment with direct investment. At Bharat Tex 2025, the EU and India's Ministry of Textiles jointly launched seven projects with a EUR 9.5 million grant, spanning nine states, targeting 35,000 direct beneficiaries, and aimed at embedding resource efficiency, traceability, and circular economy practices across the textile value chain.
In addition, the EU's SWITCH-Asia program is running an active intervention in Panipatand adjoining clusters, building a cluster-wide traceability mechanism and sustainable cluster brand for its recycling MSMEs, with green finance mobilisation underway as recently as April 2026. The signal is consistent: India's textile clusters are not just being observed by the international community. They are being invested in.
UNEP is also building a National Textile Life Cycle Inventory Database for India,foundational infrastructure for EPR, Ecomark, and DPP-readiness compliance. Also, the UNIDO-GEF Textiles Project is running pilot interventions in Tirupur and across seven other clusters, designed as a scalable model for the sector.
Complementing this, GIZ India, under the EU-India Resource Efficiency and Circular Economy Initiative, released a dedicated Textile Toolkit at Bharat Tex 2025, providing Indian manufacturers with a practical framework for measuring and improving circularity across their operations.
On the domestic side, the Union Budget 2026-27 introduced the Tex-Eco Initiative as part of an Integrated Programme for the Textile Sector, providing MSMEs a fiscal framework for circular manufacturing, digital traceability, and green factory ratings aligned with global retailer requirements. Approved in November 2025, the Tex-RAMPS scheme strengthens research and innovation systems, while the TEEM Scheme provides capital support for cluster modernisation including ZLD (Zero Liquid Discharge) infrastructure.
What Bharat Tex 2026 offers
Bharat Tex 2026 is where this momentum finds its stage.Sustainability Pavilions will feature verified outcomes from clusters like Tirupur and Panipat, not projected targets. Dedicated sessions on Digital Product Passports and traceability will address the most pressing compliance question exporters face: how do you prove what you claim? India's textile recycling market is projected to reach US$ 3.5 billion by 2030, generating nearly one lakh green jobs. The innovators and manufacturers building that market will be on the floor.
India's competitive advantage in the next decade will not be cost alone. It will be credibility.
Walter Reiners Foundation highlights resource-efficient engineering at Techtextil 2026
As the global textile market surges toward a projected $660 billion valuation in 2026, the industry’s focus has moved decisively from mass production to resource-efficient engineering. At the recent Techtextil trade fair in Frankfurt, the VDMA’s Walter Reiners Foundation reinforced this shift by honoring five young engineers for breakthroughs in textile sustainability and automation. Presented by Peter D Dornier, Chairman, these awards come at a time when order intake for textile care and fabric technologies has risen by 8.8 per cent, signaling a robust institutional appetite for modernization. These academic contributions, ranging from fiber composite optimization to CFD flow modeling, are no longer purely theoretical; they provide the technical scaffolding for a sector grappling with the European Green Deal’s rigorous transparency and recycling mandates.
Navigating the high-tech performance gap
The apparel sector faces a significant challenge of balancing a 6.8 per cent annual growth rate in fiber production - expected to hit 132 million tons - with the urgent need for circularity. Highly qualified young engineers are essential for tomorrow's success, notes Dornier, highlighting that the industry’s resilience depends on mastering networked production systems. While the smart textile market is exploding into a $9.61 billion revolution, the integration of AI and resource-efficient processes is critical to offset rising raw material costs. VDMA-backed innovations in mechanical engineering are now the primary drivers in closing material loops, ensuring that European manufacturers maintain technological sovereignty in a landscape increasingly defined by digital traceability and ‘self-healing’ performance fabrics.
Foundation insights: The Walter Reiners legacy
Established by the VDMA Textile Machinery Association, the Walter Reiners Foundation promotes the next generation of German textile engineering. By providing scholarships and awards, it supports research in high-performance machinery and sustainable manufacturing. With a focus on digital automation and circularity, the foundation ensures the sector’s long-term financial stability and global competitiveness.
Infrastructure over ambition: RE&UP scales circularity in Copenhagen
At the Global Fashion Summit 2026 in Copenhagen, the dialogue surrounding textile sustainability moved decisively from theoretical goals to industrial-scale implementation. Fatih Konukoğlu, Chairman, RE&UP and Vice Chairman, Sanko Holding, emphasized, currently valued at $1.7 billlion-the global textile recycling market requires immediate physical infrastructure rather than further corporate pledges. Participating in the ‘New Rules’ keynote, Konukoğlu highlighted, while the fashion industry faces a 6.8 per cent annual increase in fiber waste, the current bottleneck is not technology, but the collaborative scaling of post-consumer sorting and recycling. The problem is too big for anyone to solve alone, Konukoğlu stated, noting, RE&UP’s facilities are already operational, bridging the gap between waste collection and high-performance fiber production.
Engineering a closed-loop value chain
The summit served as a showcase for RE&UP’s integrated circular ecosystem, which utilizes proprietary thermomechanical technology to separate complex polycotton blends - a process traditionally considered a major hurdle in textile-to-textile recycling. With a projected capacity to process 200,000 tons of textile waste annually by 2026-end, the company is positioning itself to help brands meet the European Green Deal’s rigorous transparency mandates. By transforming discarded garments into ‘Next-Gen’ cotton and polyester that perform on par with virgin fibers, RE&UP is tackling the volatility of raw material costs.
This industrial approach offers a blueprint for the sector to achieve the 50 per cent virgin resource reduction target set by the Global Fashion Agenda, proving that circularity is now a measurable financial lever.
RE&UP is a Netherlands-headquartered circular technology company backed by Sanko Holding’s century-long textile expertise. Specializing in high-performance recycled fibers, it serves global apparel brands seeking sustainable alternatives to virgin cotton and polyester. The firm aims for a global recycling capacity of 1 million tons by 2030, supported by robust vertical integration.
Sourcing Reimagined: Texworld Paris 2026 bridges the data-sustainability gap
The 58th edition of Texworld Apparel Sourcing Paris has concluded with a decisive shift toward high-tech, traceable manufacturing, as the global textile and apparel market climbs toward a projected $2.36 trillion valuation in 2026. Hosting over 1,300 exhibitors from 35 countries, the event highlighted a critical transition: sustainability is no longer a marketing ‘add-on’ but a baseline requirement for European market entry.
With the Econogy Tour and Econogy Finder tools, Messe Frankfurt has institutionalized traceability, allowing buyers to verify circularity metrics in real-time. This structural change addresses the European Green Deal’s upcoming material passport mandates, ensuring that the 11,000+ professional visitors can secure reliable partners in an increasingly regulated landscape.
Diversification and high-performance segments
As brands navigate rising raw material costs and a 4.2 per cent CAGR in the clothing textiles segment, sourcing strategies are diversifying beyond traditional hubs. While China and Turkey maintain dominance, the 2026 showcase saw a surge in high-value participation from India and South Korea, particularly in the ELITE sector. Notable additions like OCM India and Reliance indicate a move toward premium menswear and technical fabrics. The integration of the Avantex Fashion Pitch winner, GoldenEye Smart Vision, further underscored the industry's reliance on AI-driven quality control to reduce waste. According to industry analysts, this "smarter" layout, which bridges the gap between raw fibers and finished garments, is essential for a retail sector where e-commerce is expected to grow by 21.5 per cent this year.
Europe’s premier fashion and textile sourcing platform
Texworld Paris is Europe’s premier sourcing platform for the global textile and fashion industry. Managed by Messe Frankfurt, it connects international manufacturers—primarily from Asia and Eastern Europe—with high-volume buyers and luxury labels. The fair focuses on diverse categories including cotton, denim, functional fabrics, and trims, aiming for 15 per cent annual growth in sustainable exhibitor participation to align with global ESG standards.
Kontoor Brands sharpens portfolio with strategic Lee divestiture and $750 million buyback
Kontoor Brands is undergoing a fundamental structural transition as it enters the 2026 fiscal year. Following stronger-than-anticipated first-quarter results - where revenue from continuing operations reached $613 million - the company announced a competitive process to divest its Lee brand. This move allows the Greensboro-based apparel leader to concentrate resources on its most resilient growth drivers: Wrangler and Helly Hansen. To further signal confidence in this refined strategy, the Board of Directors authorized a new $750 million share repurchase program, replacing its previous 2023 mandate. Analysts note that this aggressive capital return strategy is supported by an adjusted gross margin expansion of 470 basis points, now standing at 50.6 per cent.
Wrangler and Helly Hansen drive domestic and global gains
The decision to separate Lee follows a strategic ‘consumer study’ which concluded the brand sat outside the company’s ‘long-term strategic bull’s-eye.’ In contrast, Wrangler continues to dominate the bottoms category, marking its 16th consecutive quarter of market share gains. International demand for the brand increased by 20 per cent in Q1, while Helly Hansen’s pro-forma revenue grew by 16 per cent, boosted by the expanding technical outdoor and workwear segments. Focus is critical; by dedicating the brand’s capital to activity-based brands with durable growth, they accelerate long-term profitability, stated Joe Alkire, Executive Vice President and CFO.
Navigating supply chain volatility through strategic pricing
Despite the portfolio consolidation, Kontoor faces persistent headwinds from fluctuating raw material costs and a complex tariff environment. The company has integrated a 15 per cent reciprocal tariff rate into its 2026 outlook, balancing these costs through targeted pricing actions and channel mix optimization. A recent case study of their direct-to-consumer (DTC) expansion showed a 38 per cent increase in international DTC revenue, providing a higher-margin buffer against wholesale disruptions. As the global denim market is projected to reach $25.08 billion this year, Kontoor’s leaner, performance-oriented structure is designed to capture a 15 per cent valuation premium by aligning with modern consumer preferences for functional, high-quality apparel.
Operational focus and financial resilience
Kontoor Brands is a leading global lifestyle apparel company managing a portfolio of heritage and technical brands, including Wrangler and Helly Hansen. Operating primarily in the denim, outdoor, and workwear categories, the firm serves major retail and digital markets across North America, Europe, and Asia. Recent growth plans prioritize direct-to-consumer expansion and technical category innovation, supported by a 2026 revenue outlook of up to $3.46 billion.
Established through a 2019 spin-off from VF Corporation, the company now emphasizes high-impact capital allocation and supply chain agility.
Green spinning: FET’s solvent-free innovation wins global acclaim
Fibre Extrusion Technology (FET) has secured the Techtextil Innovation Award 2026 in the New Production Technology category, marking a decisive shift in how technical textiles are manufactured. The Leeds-based firm was recognized for its FET-500 series, a pioneering gel spinning system that eliminates the use of toxic solvents like hexane and dichloromethane. Traditionally, producing ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) - a material 15 times stronger than steel - required nearly 100kg of solvent for every 1kg of yarn. By utilizing supercritical CO2 (scCO2) as a non-toxic processing medium, FET has neutralized a major environmental liability in the production of body armor, surgical sutures, and high-strength offshore ropes.
Unlocking R&D in the technical textile market
Beyond environmental gains, the FET-500 series addresses a critical supply chain bottleneck: the lack of small-scale, flexible manufacturing. With the technical textiles market projected to reach $264.42 billion by late 2026, the demand for bespoke, high-performance fibers is growing Current systems operate on a massive, inflexible scale, notes Jonny Hunter, Research Manager explaining, FET’s modular lab system now allows for rapid prototyping and niche product development that was previously cost-prohibitive. This capability offers a strategic opportunity for medical and automotive manufacturers to integrate high-value yarns without the traditional overhead of industrial-scale extrusion, effectively shortening the innovation cycle for "smart" and protective apparel.
Based in the UK, FET designs and manufactures advanced extrusion equipment for the global textile and biomedical sectors. Specializing in multifilament and nonwoven systems, the company serves over 130 polymer types. Its 2026 growth strategy focuses on medical-grade fibers and sustainable machinery, maintaining a strong export presence across Europe and Asia.
EU Green mandate forces global apparel shift as SEC pulls back
The global textile and apparel industry is facing a transformative regulatory split as the European Union finalizes its Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD). While the SEC in the United States moves toward repealing climate reporting rules, European regulators are doubling down on mandatory ESG disclosures. For apparel giants, this means that data-backed transparency regarding water usage, chemical management, and labor conditions is no longer optional for those accessing the European market. Analysts suggest this creates a two-tier compliance environment where manufacturers must choose between rigorous EU standards or the increasingly deregulated American landscape.
Data-driven accountability in the fashion supply chain
Current industry data reveals, the textile sector accounts for nearly 10 per cent of global carbon emissions, a figure the EU aims to slash through its finalized reporting standards. These mandates require companies to provide granular evidence of circularity and waste reduction. For instance, a recent case study of a major European denim manufacturer showed that integrating real-time ESG tracking reduced operational water consumption by 22 per cent over eighteen months. The shift from voluntary to mandatory reporting is the single greatest catalyst for innovation in apparel manufacturing we have seen this decade, notes Dr. Elena Rossi, a lead industrial economist.
Navigating high-stakes compliance and market access
The primary challenge for textile exporters remains the high cost of digital infrastructure needed for traceability. However, the opportunities for those who adapt early are significant. Brands demonstrating high ESG compliance are currently seeing a 15 per cent premium in investor interest compared to their less transparent peers. As the EU’s finalized standards become the de facto global benchmark, the apparel sector is witnessing a consolidation of suppliers who can provide validated, low-impact raw materials, effectively reshaping the competitive dynamics of international fashion trade.
Industrial framework and strategic outlook
This initiative represents the EU’s regulatory body governing market standards for consumer goods and industrial textiles. Operating across 27 member states, the entity oversees strict compliance for high-impact sectors. Current strategies prioritize a transition toward circular economy models, aiming for a carbon-neutral industrial footprint by 2050 through rigorous financial and environmental disclosures.











