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As the global fashion industry contends with uneven demand in early 2026, Sri Lanka’s apparel sector is positioning itself for a ‘major transformation’ through high-value vertical integration. Despite a moderate 2.66 per cent Y-o-Y contraction in January export revenues to $425.44 million, industry leaders remain bullish on a rebound. The Export Development Board (EDB) has forecasted total annual revenues of $5.5 billion for 2026, banking on newly implemented trade concessions that provide the island with a critical competitive edge over regional rivals.

Navigating global volatility with trade arbitrage

The sector’s resilience is increasingly tied to shifting trade frameworks. While shipments to the US dipped slightly in January, the February 24 rollout of a uniform 10 per cent temporary US tariff has replaced volatile country-specific duties, offering manufacturers rare pricing certainty. Simultaneously, the UK market has emerged as a pillar of stability, recording a 0.23 per cent increase to $61.71 million. This growth is attributed to the Developing Countries Trading Scheme (DCTS), effective January 1, 2026, which allows for enhanced sourcing flexibility and zero-tariff access for a broader range of Sri Lankan-made garments.

Strategic modernization and social sustainability

To offset rising operational costs and recent climate-related disruptions - including the impact of Cyclone Ditwah - the Joint Apparel Association Forum (JAAF) is accelerating the adoption of Industry 4.0 technologies. Firms are deploying automated cutting and digital prototyping to reduce lead times by an estimated 15 per cent. This technical pivot is coupled with a reinforced commitment to ‘ethical manufacturing,’ a move Yohan Lawrence, Secretary General, JAAF, describes as a ‘long-term competitive moat.’ By aligning with mandatory EU human rights due diligence, Sri Lanka is securing its reputation as a high-compliance, low-risk partner for premium global brands.

Sourcing synergy: The 15th Textile Series return

The upcoming 15th Sri Lankan Textile Series (March 5–7, 2026) in Colombo arrives as a vital commercial catalyst. Featuring concurrent expos in technology, fabrics, and chemicals, the event serves as a centralized hub for manufacturers to bypass supply chain bottlenecks. With 25 years of global expertise, CEMS-Global is facilitating direct access to the specialized dyestuffs and high-tech machinery required for Sri Lanka to hit its ambitious $8 billion revenue target by 2028. This integrated ecosystem is essential for maintaining the momentum of the ‘Garments without Guilt’ legacy in an increasingly data-driven global market.

Sri Lanka’s apparel industry is the nation's primary industrial exporter, specializing in high-end intimate wear and activewear. In partnership with CEMS Lanka, CEMS-Global USA organizes the country's most comprehensive B2B sourcing platform. The sector aims for $5.5 billion in 2026 revenue, focusing on digital transformation and utilizing UK/EU preferential trade schemes to expand its global footprint.

  

As the ‘China Plus One’ sourcing strategy reshapes global apparel trade, Tirupur-based Eastman Exports Global Clothing is consolidating its position as a dominant vertically integrated powerhouse. For the fiscal year ending March 31, 2025, the company recorded a robust revenue of Rs 1,440 crore, reflecting a 15 per cent Y-o-Y growth. This financial gr follows a strategic 20 per cent stake sale to Bharat Biotech Group’s investment arm, providing the capital necessary to transition from a traditional garment exporter to a technology-first manufacturing hub.

Backward integration and the synthetics shift

To insulate itself from the volatility of raw cotton prices, Eastman has intensified its focus on backward integration, expanding its in-house spinning and fabric processing capabilities. The company recently allocated Rs 35 crore to its fabric division to boost its synthetic material base, aiming to capture a larger share of the high-margin winter clothing and performance sportswear segments. By controlling production from fiber to finished garment, the firm currently ships up to 12 million pieces per month, serving premium global labels like Hugo Boss and Burberry.

Decarbonizing the supply chain for 2026 compliance

With the European Union’s carbon-border adjustments and ESG mandates coming into effect, Eastman has accelerated its sustainability roadmap. The firm has successfully transitioned away from coal by adopting agricultural bio-briquettes and now recycles 4 million liters of wastewater daily through Zero Liquid Discharge (ZLD) systems. According to its latest SBTi progress report, these measures have contributed to significant Scope 1 and Scope 2 emission reductions, ensuring that its facilities remain compliant with the increasingly stringent audit requirements of its UK and US-based retail partners.

Strategic expansion into high-growth markets

Under the leadership of N Chandran, Chairman the company is diversifying its market footprint beyond traditional Western strongholds. Leveraging India’s recently signed FTAs, Eastman is aggressively pursuing growth in Australia, Japan, and the UAE. This geographic expansion is supported by the establishment of a dedicated US office and a newly operational UK hub, positioning the brand to offer shorter lead times and localized customer support. We cannot predict the market, but we can extend our flexibility through integrated strength, noted Chandran, signaling a shift toward more agile, demand-driven manufacturing models.

Headquartered in Tirupur, Eastman Exports is a premier vertically integrated knitwear specialist. It serves high-end fashion brands across the US, Europe, and the Middle East. With Rs 1,440 crore in FY25 revenue, the firm is targeting expanded synthetic production and global market diversification through strategic partnerships.

  

As geopolitical instability and climate-driven disasters accelerate, the role of corporate apparel is shifting from retail dominance to frontline humanitarian logistics. Fast Retailing, the parent group of Uniqlo, has reinforced its ‘Heart of LifeWear’ commitment by pledging another one million items of Heattech thermal clothing for the 2025/2026 winter season. This follows a high-impact deployment in February 2025, where the brand delivered over 532,000 items to refugees in Jordan’s Za’atari camp and other regions. By integrating its technical apparel into global aid frameworks, Uniqlo is moving beyond traditional ESG metrics towards a ‘utility-first’ philanthropic model.

Strategic logistics and high-value material aid

The initiative’s effectiveness lies in the specific utility of Heattech – a proprietary moisture-wicking, heat-retaining fabric developed with Toray Industries. In regions like Syria, where temperatures frequently drop near freezing, this technical aid addresses immediate safety and dignity concerns for an estimated 1.35 million returnees following recent regional shifts. Unlike bulk-donated secondhand goods, these new, performance-oriented garments provide standardized protection against hypothermia, serving as a critical resource for UNHCR and local NGOs operating in 28 countries.

Financial performance and market resilience

This humanitarian push coincides with a period of unprecedented fiscal strength for the Tokyo-listed conglomerate. For the fiscal year ending August 31, 2025, Fast Retailing reported a 13.6% increase in business profit to ¥551.1 billion, marking its fourth consecutive year of record earnings. While the Greater China market faced localized cooling, the brand's rapid expansion in North America and Europe - where revenue increased by 24.5 per cent and 33.6 per cent respectively - has provided the capital required to sustain large-scale social investments.

The lifecycle of social responsibility

We believe we can turn the power of clothing into a force for good, stated the group’s executive leader, emphasizing that the ‘Heart of LifeWear’ is a long-term operational pillar rather than a singular campaign. By 2026, the program has evolved to include localized support, such as the donation of delivery vans in rural Moldova to overcome last-mile aid challenges. This strategy ensures that even as Uniqlo scales toward its ¥3.75 trillion revenue target for 2026, its social impact remains as technically sophisticated as its retail inventory.

Uniqlo is a global apparel leader defined by its ‘LifeWear’ philosophy - creating high-quality, innovative basics like Heattech and AIRism. With operations in 25+ countries, the group expects record ¥3.75 trillion revenue in FY2026. Founded in 1984 in Hiroshima, the brand has evolved from a local warehouse into a tech-driven retail giant.

  

As the global apparel sector navigates a complex recovery in early 2026, Türkiye is intensifying its transition from a volume-based manufacturer to a high-value ‘organizer country.’ The upcoming Texhibition Istanbul exhibition, from March 4–6, 2026, serves as a commercial litmus test for a sector grappling with a 60 per cent – 65per cent production cost gap compared to Asian competitors. Despite these fiscal headwinds, Türkiye’s combined textile and apparel exports generated $26 billion in 2025, sustained by a record-breaking valuation of $4.3 per kg—nearly triple the national export average. This premium positioning is designed to neutralize domestic inflation and the competitive threat posed by the new India-EU Free Trade Agreement, which has narrowed Türkiye’s historical duty-free advantage.

Agile sourcing and the Mediterranean shift

The industry is currently executing a ‘Near-Shoring 2.0’ strategy, focusing on high-responsiveness logistics for the European market, which absorbed 40 per cent of textile exports last year. While EU demand remains conservative, Turkish manufacturers are finding significant growth in Africa and the Middle East, with exports to Egypt rising by 23 per cent in 2025. By utilizing its strategic location, the sector offers lead times measured in days rather than weeks, a critical asset as global brands prioritize inventory liquidity. We are seeing a strategic necessity for market diversification and a move toward an 'organiser country' model, states Ahmet Öksüz, Chairman, ITHIB, highlighting the intent to acquire struggling international brands to secure direct retail access.

Sustainability as a prerequisite for EU market access

With the EU’s Digital Product Passport (DPP) requirements looming, Turkish mills are integrating advanced traceability into their denim and technical textile divisions. The ‘Blue Black Denim’ showcase at Texhibition underlines this shift, emphasizing water-efficient dyeing and recycled blends. This move toward circularity is boosted by the IPA-III project, a €7 million initiative aimed at decarbonizing the supply chain. Data suggests that Turkish technical textile exports rose to $2.3 billion in 2025, a growth trend expected to continue as the industry focuses on performance fabrics that meet stringent European ESG standards.

Technology integration and future market size

To remain resilient against fluctuating energy prices and labor costs, the sector is investing heavily in Industry 4.0 technologies and smart material engineering. The focus is shifting toward technical sportswear and medical textiles, segments projected to drive a 4.3 per cent CAGR in market revenue through 2033. By aligning with the Green Deal and adopting waterless dyeing technologies, Turkish suppliers are securing their roles as indispensable partners for premium global labels like Hugo Boss and Burberry. This technological modernization is the industry’s primary defense against the ‘cost crisis,’ ensuring that Türkiye retains its status as the world’s fifth-largest textile powerhouse.

Türkiye is a top-five global exporter, serving as the EU's second-largest supplier of high-end fabrics and denim. The industry is targeting $17.2 billion in market revenue by 2033, focusing on technical textiles and African market expansion. Despite employment losses in 2025, the sector remains a primary foreign currency source, aiming for a €2.05 billion operating profit cycle.

  

The European Commission’s decision to move into the provisional application phase of the EU–Mercosur Interim Trade Agreement (iTA) marks a significant shift in European trade policy, effectively bypassing decades of deadlock. Following recent ratifications by Argentina and Uruguay in February 2026, the European Union is now leveraging this ‘interim"’legal structure to activate trade measures as early as March 2026. This tactical deployment allows Brussels to begin dismantling high tariffs - currently as high as 35 per cent on industrial exports - while a broader Partnership Agreement remains under review by the Court of Justice of the European Union.

Economic stakes and the high cost of onaction

European business coalitions, including major representatives from the automotive, chemical, and textile sectors, have highlighted the severe financial penalties of further delay. Conservative estimates suggest, stalled negotiations have cost European exporters approximately €3 billion in monthly trade volume since 2021, culminating in a nearly €291 billion loss in potential GDP. By contrast, full operationalization is projected to trigger a nearly 40 per cent spike in EU exports to the region. In a global trade environment increasingly defined by protectionism, this agreement serves as a vital hedge, granting European firms a first-mover advantage in a market of 270 million consumers before competing global powers further entrench their positions.

Strategic resilience in a fragmented global Market

Beyond immediate tariff reductions, the agreement is being reframed as a critical pillar of Europe’s economic security. Access to South America’s vast reserves of critical raw materials- such as lithium and niobium - is essential for the EU’s green and digital transitions. By securing rules-based access to these inputs, the EU aims to diversify its supply chains away from high-risk dependencies. The agreement also establishes binding standards on sustainability and labor rights, effectively exporting European regulatory norms to one of the world's largest trading blocs. For industries like textiles, where European design currently faces 35% import duties, the removal of barriers represents a transformative opportunity for market expansion and high-value brand placement.

Operationalization and the path to full ratification

While the provisional application provides a much-needed bridge for commerce, European industry leaders are calling for rapid ‘practical delivery.’ This includes the timely synchronization of customs procedures and the removal of non-tariff barriers that have historically complicated transatlantic trade. Although five EU member states, including France and Austria, have voiced continued opposition due to agricultural concerns, the separation of the trade components into an ‘Interim Agreement’ allows for immediate economic relief. The priority now shifts to ensuring that the technical implementation of the deal - particularly regarding tariff-free quotas and public procurement access - is managed transparently to prevent market disturbances while maintaining the current momentum toward full ratification.

Euratex represents the €170 billion European textile and clothing industry, a sector comprising 200,000 companies and 1.3 million workers. The organization advocates for fair trade and ambitious industrial policies to support high-value manufacturing. With €64 billion in annual exports, the industry views the Mercosur deal as critical for future competitiveness and sustainable supply chain resilience.

  

While the luxury landscape in Russia has been fundamentally reshaped by store closures and export bans, LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton continues to maintain a significant operational foothold through its hospitality division. Despite the immediate cessation of its retail activities in 2022 - including the shuttering of 124 boutiques - the conglomerate has retained ownership of the historic Grand Hotel Europe in St Petersburg. This 19th-century landmark, managed under LVMH’s Belmond subsidiary, highlights a complex navigation of international sanctions, as it remains a primary hub for sanctioned corporate entities and local elites.

Operational independence as a regulatory buffer

LVMH has characterized the hotel’s continued operation as an autonomous endeavor, independent of the broader Belmond distribution system. This structural separation is a critical component of the group's compliance strategy, as accommodation and catering services generally fall outside the scope of existing luxury good export restrictions. However, recent financial filings and VAT records reveal, the property has secured substantial service contracts with state-affiliated organizations, including energy giants and sanctioned financial institutions. For LVMH, this represents a calculated effort to preserve localized human capital and long-standing city partnerships, while other Western hotel chains have opted for complete divestment.

Financial resilience and long-term market positioning

The St. Petersburg asset has demonstrated remarkable fiscal strength, with annual revenues reportedly doubling between 2022 and 2024 to reach approximately 1.9 billion rubles ($25 million). By posting a record net profit of $5.7 million in 2024, the property serves as a high-margin revenue stream that offsets the ‘market marginalization’ experienced by the group’s fashion and spirits divisions in the region. This retention strategy suggests that LVMH is prioritizing ‘brand continuity’ over immediate exit, positioning itself for a rapid re-entry into the Russian market should geopolitical conditions stabilize. Maintaining such a prestigious landmark ensures that the brand's cultural influence remains entrenched within Russia's wealthiest demographic.

LVMH is the world’s foremost luxury conglomerate, managing 75 prestigious houses across fashion, jewelry, and selective retailing. With 2025 revenues reaching €80.8 billion, the group focuses on high-growth markets in Asia and the U.S. while maintaining a 22 per cent operating margin. Originally a merger between Louis Vuitton and Moët Hennessy in 1987, the company is now expanding its experiential hospitality footprint to drive long-term desirability.

  

In an era where sneaker cycles are increasingly dictated by fleeting social media trends, Adidas Originals is doubling down on its most enduring asset. The German sportswear giant has unveiled its Spring 2026 strategy for the Superstar, repositioning the 1969 basketball-prodigy-turned-streetwear-staple not merely as a heritage product, but as a cross-cultural bridge. By centering its latest campaign around a surrealist ‘Hotel Superstar’ narrative, the brand is attempting to synthesize the various subcultures - from skateboarding and basketball to high fashion and global pop - that have claimed the shell-toe silhouette over the last five decades. This move signals a strategic pivot toward ‘timelessness’ as a luxury attribute, shielding the brand from the volatility of the fast-fashion market.

A cinematic shift in cultural storytelling

Helmed by filmmaker Thibaut Grevet and narrated by Samuel L Jackson, the brand’s latest creative direction, moves away from traditional product-centric advertising in favor of a metaphorical exploration of influence. The narrative follows Jackson through a non-linear hotel setting, a deliberate aesthetic choice meant to mirror the shoe's own immunity to the passage of time. By casting a multi-generational ensemble - including football sensation Lamine Yamal, fashion fixture Kendall Jenner, and music icons like Jennie and Baby Keem - Adidas is effectively mapping the Superstar’s relevance across disparate demographics. This ‘all-star’ approach functions as a hedge, ensuring the silhouette remains top-of-mind for Gen Z consumers while retaining its prestige among the older cohorts who first popularized the shoe in the 1980s.

Strategic diversification of the Superstar identity

Beyond the visual spectacle, the Spring 2026 rollout marks a significant expansion of the Superstar’s material footprint, particularly within the brand's apparel division. Adidas is moving aggressively into contemporary tailoring and ‘lifestyle’ textiles, signaling an intent to compete more directly with premium streetwear labels. The introduction of denim shorts and faux-leather track tops suggests a move away from purely athletic silhouettes toward a ‘sport-luxe’ hybrid. Specifically, the brand’s increased focus on denim - highlighted through its partnership with skateboarding legend Tyshawn Jones - reflects a broader corporate strategy to capture a larger share of the everyday casual wear market, moving the Superstar franchise beyond the confines of the sneaker shelf and into a full-wardrobe lifestyle brand.

Integrating innovation with heritage DNA

While the core design of the Superstar remains faithful to its original silhouette, the Spring 2026 collection introduces subtle technical and aesthetic shifts designed to keep the product competitive in a saturated market. The color palette focuses on a high-contrast black and white foundation, invigorated by ‘Equipment Blocking’ red accents - a nod to the brand’s technical archives. For the women's line, the inclusion of crochet and structured faux leather indicates a willingness to experiment with textures that blur the lines between high-fashion runway trends and traditional sportswear. According to Annie Barrett, Vice President-Marketing, Adidas Originals, the goal is to prove that the shoe’s design remains a viable canvas for modern expression without losing the ‘DNA’that made it a global icon. Global activation and market positioning

The global rollout of the Spring 2026 campaign is set to be one of the brand's most integrated efforts to date, featuring a combination of digital content and immersive physical activations. This multi-platform approach highlights Adidas's recognition that in 2026, brand loyalty is built through experiential marketing as much as product quality. By weaving the Superstar’s history into a narrative of modern creativity and individuality, Adidas is attempting to secure the shoe's position as a permanent fixture in the global cultural lexicon. The strategy is clear: rather than chasing the next big trend, Adidas is betting that the most profitable path forward lies in reinforcing the ‘originality’ of its most famous icon.

  

Australia’s home textile import sector reached a valuation of $2.14 billion in 2025, maintaining a consistent growth trajectory despite global inflationary pressures. While China remains the primary supplier, accounting for approximately 58 per cent of the market share, India is rapidly narrowing the gap following the full implementation of the Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (ECTA).

In CY25, Indian exports of bed linen and floor coverings to Australia increased by 14.2 per cent, capitalizing on zero-duty access that provides a significant competitive edge over non-FTA partners. This regional realignment is compelling Australian procurement officers to diversify their supply chains, with a measurable shift toward high-thread-count cotton and sustainable hemp-based textiles, which saw a 22 per cent increase in import volume.

Sustainability and premiumization driving import value

The technical composition of Australian textile imports is evolving as ‘green’ regulatory requirements become more stringent. Importers are increasingly prioritizing verified recycled content and traceable fibers, a trend that has benefited specialized manufacturers in Pakistan and Vietnam. Data from the 2025 trade cycle indicates that while unit volumes remained relatively flat, the total value of imports rose by 3.4 per cent due to a broader industry move toward premiumization.

Industry analysts at the Sydney Textile Forum noted, the demand for antimicrobial and temperature-regulating fabrics is no longer a niche segment but a baseline requirement for major hospitality and residential contracts. As Australian retailers navigate a 0.8 per cent rise in logistics costs, the focus has shifted toward high-margin, durable goods that justify the increased expense of trans-Pacific freight.

Australia relies on imports for over 90 per cent of its home textile needs, with a primary focus on bed, bath, and kitchen linens. The sector is currently transitioning toward a circular economy model, with growth plans centered on 100 per cent recyclable fiber mandates by 2030. Financial performance remains stable, supported by a resilient housing and renovation market.

  

The Bangladesh ready-made garment (RMG) sector is facing a critical freeze in procurement as rapid shifts in United States tariff policy create a ‘wait-and-watch’ environment for major fashion retailers. Since early 2025, Bangladeshi apparel has undergone four separate duty revisions, moving from a 37 per cent reciprocal surcharge to a recently negotiated 19 per cent rate under a bilateral Agreement on Reciprocal Trade (ART). However, the implementation of a 15 per cent universal levy in late February 2026 - following a Supreme Court ruling that disrupted previous executive orders - has left the effective duty on Bangladeshi goods at approximately 31.5 per cent. This instability has triggered a slowdown in bookings for the Fall/Winter 2026 season, with industry leaders reporting that buyers are deferring commitments until duty clarity emerges.

Strategic pivot toward US-linked raw materials

A pivotal clause in the February 9, 2026, trade pact offers a potential lifeline: zero-duty access for specified volumes of garments manufactured using US-origin cotton and man-made fibers. This ‘reciprocal’ mechanism is designed to deepen supply chain integration between Washington and Dhaka but poses significant operational challenges. Bangladesh currently imports only a small fraction of its $16 billion textile input requirement from the US, relying heavily on regional suppliers like India and China. Shifting these procurement channels to qualify for duty exemptions requires a massive realignment of logistics and yarn-forward compliance. The industry is at a crossroads where the cost of raw material transition must be weighed against the benefit of market access, noted Mahbubur Rahman, Commerce Secretary.

The RMG sector is the cornerstone of Bangladesh's economy, contributing roughly 10 per cemt of GDP and accounting for over 80 per cent of total export earnings. Employing four million workers, primarily women, the industry is transitioning from basic mass-market apparel to high-value technical garments and premium knitwear. Despite 2026 trade headwinds, the sector aims for a 5 per cent annual growth rate through 2028, supported by the new PM MITRA-style industrial parks and a strategic focus on ESG-compliant manufacturing to maintain its position as the world's second-largest apparel exporter.

  

Big Story Bharat Tex 2026 Redefining the Indian textile value chain 01

Scheduled to return to the iconic Bharat Mandapam in New Delhi from July 14–17, 2026, global textile extravangza, Bharat Tex 2026 positions India as the primary nexus of the global value chain, spanning everything from raw fibers and yarns to finished apparel, technical textiles, and artisanal handlooms. The 2026 edition arrives with unprecedented momentum, expecting over 5,500 exhibitors and 7,000 international buyers from more than 130 countries. With a projected turnout exceeding 130,000 visitors, the platform serves as a vital gateway for investors and brands seeking deep market entry into a sector that is a cornerstone of the Indian economy.

Navigating new trade corridors

The timing of Bharat Tex 2026 is strategically aligned with a transformative era in Indian trade policy. Following the operationalization of landmark Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) with the United Kingdom and the European Union in early 2026, alongside strengthened trade ties with the United States, India has secured zero-duty or preferential access to a combined import market worth hundreds of billions of dollars. These ‘Free Trade Corridors’ are effectively reshaping global sourcing patterns, offering international retailers a highly cost-competitive, reliable, and duty-efficient alternative to traditional manufacturing hubs. For global sourcing agencies, the event provides a definitive roadmap to capitalize on these strengthened bilateral ties and India's emerging role as a strategic production partner.

Scalable sustainability and innovation

Beyond trade volumes, Bharat Tex 2026 is a laboratory for Industry 5.0 and circularity. The event’s dedicated Sustainability and Recycling Pavilions shift the narrative from theoretical concepts to commercially viable solutions. Highlighting ‘waste-to-value’ innovations, regenerative raw materials, and traceable supply chains, the fair demonstrates how India is aligning its massive manufacturing scale with global ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) imperatives. This focus on ‘Scalable Sustainability’ ensures that large-scale supply chains can remain competitive while meeting the rigorous environmental regulations of Western markets.

Where strategy meets execution

The fair functions as a high-level dialogue platform, bridging the gap between policy intent and industry implementation. The Global Textile Dialogue will feature CXO roundtables, technical panels, and policy discussions aimed at achieving India’s ambitious Vision 2030 goal of $100 billion in textile exports. By integrating the Prime Minister’s 5F Vision -Farm to Fiber, Fabric, Fashion, and Foreign - Bharat Tex 2026 offers a holistic view of an ecosystem that is increasingly future-ready, resilient, and digitally integrated.

India is the world's third-largest textile exporter, supported by a vertically integrated value chain and a workforce of 45 million. The Union Budget 2026–27 has further accelerated growth through the National Fibre Scheme and PM MITRA mega-parks. Historically a leader in cotton, India is now aggressively expanding into man-made fibers and technical textiles to secure a dominant global market share by 2030.

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