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The Hong Kong Research Institute of Textiles and Apparel (HKRITA) has significantly accelerated its cross-border integration, securing high-level accolades in Shanghai and forging a landmark academic partnership in Chengdu. This strategic momentum centers on the ‘Green Machine,’ a hydrothermal separation technology that recently earned a spot among the ‘20 Shanghai Outstanding ESG Cases’ during the 2026 Corporate Sustainability Development Conference. By successfully isolating polyester from cotton in blended textiles with a 97 per cent recovery rate, the Green Machine is addressing a critical bottleneck in the $2.5 trillion global apparel market: the recycling of post-consumer poly-cotton blends.

Cross-industry decarbonization and digital transparency

During a roundtable session on April 28, Jake Koh, CEO, HKRITA emphasized. that achieving a net-zero supply chain requires "end-to-end carbon reduction" beyond mere hardware implementation. The institute is now advocating for digital monitoring and carbon footprint transparency to validate circularity for global brands. Case studies from recent industrial-scale trials indicate that the Green Machine requires only 19 GJ of energy per ton of recycled PET—roughly 30 per cent of the energy consumed for virgin fiber production. This efficiency gain is pivotal as the industry prepares for the National 15th Five-Year Plan, which prioritizes green upgrading and digital-twin manufacturing.

Academic alliances driving commercialization

To further bridge the "lab-to-market" gap, HKRITA signed a Memorandum of Cooperation with Chengdu Qinggong Polytechnic University on April 23. This first-of-its-kind international research agreement targets talent development and startup incubation, aligning with HKRITA’s "Open Lab" residency programs. By utilizing Chengdu’s industrial resources and HKRITA’s technological IP, the partnership aims to stabilize the supply of high-purity recycled cellulose powder. As HKRITA celebrates its 20th anniversary in 2026, these collaborations demonstrate that scaling circularity in the textile sector relies as much on regional information exchange and technology sharing as it does on mechanical innovation.

Sustainable innovation hub

HKRITA is a premier applied research institute specializing in textile circularity, technical fibers, and smart manufacturing. Focusing on the Greater China and ASEAN manufacturing hubs, it manages a portfolio of 150+ patents. Celebrating its 20th year in 2026, the institute aims to scale its ‘Green Machine’ and ‘Open Lab’ initiatives to hit global net-zero targets.

 

Burberry is successfully anchoring its ‘Burberry Forward’ turnaround strategy by re-prioritizing the iconic trench coat and heritage scarves that define its 170-year legacy. Under the leadership of Joshua Schulman, CEO, the British house reported a 3 per cent increase in comparable store sales during the FY26 festive quarter, signaling a decisive shift from previous years of strategic drift. This recovery is supported by a global luxury outerwear market projected to reach $20.4 billion in 2026, as consumers increasingly seek ‘investment pieces’ over fleeting seasonal trends. By focusing on high-margin core categories, the brand achieved an adjusted operating profit of £19 million in its interim results, recovering from earlier losses.

Strategic expansion into high-growth adjacencies

While outerwear remains the primary revenue driver, Burberry is now capturing new market share through a robust expansion into premium eyewear and digital lifestyle services. The brand’s 2026 optical and sunglasses collection emphasizes ‘responsible innovation,’ utilizing bio-based acetates to meet the sustainability demands of 41 per cent of modern luxury consumers. This product diversification is coupled with a ‘social retail’ initiative, exemplified by high-tech flagship concepts in Shenzhen and London. These spaces integrate augmented reality (AR) try-ons and digital mirrors, effectively bridging the gap between traditional craftsmanship and the immersive experiences demanded by Gen Z, who now drive a significant portion of the brand’s accelerating search interest.

Navigating global headwinds and efficiencies

The path to a targeted £3 billion annual revenue remains complex, with uneven performance across geographic regions. While Greater China showed a 6 per cent uptick in recent quarters, European markets remain flat due to fluctuating tourist spend. To safeguard margins, Burberry is executing a rigorous efficiency program aimed at £80 million in annualized savings by the end of fiscal 2026. Our focus is on restoring brand clarity and reconnecting with our British roots to ensure sustainable, long-term value, states Schulman. This disciplined approach allows the house to bypass the ‘volume logic’ of mass-market retail, positioning itself as a leader in the ‘Timeless British Luxury’ segment.

Burberry is a global luxury powerhouse specializing in high-end outerwear, accessories, and beauty. Primarily active in the EMEIA, Americas, and Asia-Pacific markets, the company is currently executing a strategic pivot toward heritage-led growth. Following a restructuring to improve return on capital, Burberry's 2026 outlook focuses on reaching £3 billion in revenue through digital innovation and a revitalized "Britishness" narrative established since its 1856 founding.

Intertextile Shenzhen 2026 Pioneering the AI driven future of fashion technology

 

The global textile industry is descending upon the Shenzhen Convention & Exhibition Center from June 9–11, 2026, for the highly anticipated return of Intertextile Shenzhen Apparel Fabrics. This year’s edition is strictly aligned under the theme of textile innovation, positioning itself as a vital catalyst for the Greater Bay Area’s (GBA) rapid evolution into a premier hub for high-tech fashion and Artificial Intelligence.

A strategic alignment with the ‘Texpertise Focus AI’ concept

The 2026 fair marks a significant milestone as it integrates with Messe Frankfurt’s global ‘Texpertise Focus AI’ campaign. This initiative aims to embed artificial intelligence across the organization’s 60+ worldwide textile events. With its reputation as China’s ‘Silicon Valley,’ Shenzhen provides the perfect backdrop for this digital transition. By focusing on AI applications in textile inspection, design, and digital transactions, the fair offers a roadmap for manufacturers looking to modernize their production lines.

Wilmet Shea, General Manager, Messe Frankfurt (HK), emphasizes, the decision to prioritize innovation was a direct response to a market hungry for technological advancement. With the GBA - including regional powerhouses like Dongguan and Guangzhou - increasingly betting on AI to drive sustainability and global appeal, the fair provides the essential platform for exhibitors to connect with tech-savvy buyers and industry disruptors.

Debuting the innovation studio and future horizons forum

Building on the success of previous years, the 2026 show introduces two new high-tech zones: the Innovation Studio and the Future Horizons forum. The Innovation Studio serves as an advanced extension of ‘The Closet,’ a popular area dedicated to emerging designers and eco-friendly materials. This new showcase will highlight cutting-edge fiber solutions and advanced garment designs, allowing visitors to visualize the intersection of durability and digital aesthetics.

Complementing the physical exhibits, the Future Horizons forum will serve as a think-tank for the industry. This dedicated space will unveil technological breakthroughs that are currently redefining the textile landscape, offering garment manufacturers and suppliers the data-driven insights necessary to navigate a volatile global market.

Seamless connectivity and global accessibility

Intertextile Shenzhen remains ideally positioned in the heart of Futian’s Central Business District, ensuring easy access for visitors from Hong Kong and the wider GBA. Participation is expected to be more robust than ever, boosted by China’s expanded visa-free policy, which now includes travelers from 50 countries and regions, including recent additions like the UK and Canada. Furthermore, the implementation of 144-hour visa-free transit across five new GBA ports has significantly lowered the barriers for international trade visitors.

A comprehensive cross-category showcase

The fair will continue to showcase a full spectrum of the textile value chain, including:

  • Fibers and yarns: High-performance and technical materials.
  • Fabric categories: Premium denim, suiting, and functional activewear.
  • Digital solutions: AI-driven design software and automated quality control.

By bringing together innovators like AiDLab - which specializes in AI design solutions - and traditional fabric powerhouses, Intertextile Shenzhen 2026 ensures that innovation is not just a sub-category, but the common thread tying the entire supply chain together. Held concurrently with Yarn Expo Shenzhen and PH Value, the event offers a comprehensive, one-stop sourcing environment for the modern global apparel market.

Yarn Expo Shenzhen 2026 GBA connectivity and AI innovation drive mid year sourcing

 

The global textile industry is preparing for a strategic return to the South China manufacturing heartland as Yarn Expo Shenzhen 2026 gears up for its June 9–11 edition. Located at the Shenzhen Exhibition and Convention Center (Futian), the fair arrives at a pivotal moment for the Asia-Pacific market, which remains the world’s largest regional hub for fibers and yarns. As global demand is projected to push the sector to a valuation of $108.5 billion by late 2026, the fair provides a critical mid-year checkpoint for suppliers and buyers navigating accelerated sourcing timelines.

The strategic edge of the Greater Bay Area

Shenzhen’s position within the Greater Bay Area (GBA) offers an unparalleled ‘efficiency ecosystem.’ The city acts as a physical bridge between upstream raw material suppliers and downstream manufacturing giants across Guangzhou, Hong Kong, and Southeast Asia. This geographical advantage allows attendees to collapse the traditional supply chain, linking design and production with immediate market access.

Wilmet Shea, General Manager, Messe Frankfurt (HK) , emphasizes, the fair’s primary strength lies in its ability to convert regional logistics into tangible business outcomes. By centralizing the right decision-makers in a high-tech corridor, Yarn Expo Shenzhen enables exhibitors to raise brand visibility in an increasingly crowded global market.

A structured showcase for specialized sourcing

To facilitate high-speed matching between suppliers and buyers, the 2026 edition features eight clearly defined product zones. This structure allows visitors to compare technical specifications and sustainability credentials across diverse fiber categories:

  • Natural & luxury fibers: Dedicated zones for Cotton, Silk, Quality Wool, and high-end Cashmere.
  • Sustainable & bast fibers: A specialized Green Linen Yarn zone reflecting the industry’s shift toward eco-conscious materials.
  • Technical & synthetic innovation: Areas for Chemical and Fancy yarns, focusing on functional aesthetics and performance sportswear.

This year, the synergy with the concurrent Intertextile Shenzhen Apparel Fabrics fair is stronger than ever. As the apparel fair intensifies its focus on AI and digitalization, Yarn Expo serves as the foundational layer, showcasing the ‘smart fibers’ and sustainable blends- such as Lyocell-blends—that drive digitalized fashion production.

Innovation and sustainable Exchange

The 2026 fringe program is designed to go beyond mere product displays, offering a platform for ‘market-driven exchange.’ With one-to-one business matching sessions and trend forums, the fair addresses the growing adoption of AI in textile design and the rising demand for Global Recycled Standard (GRS) compliance.

Exhibitors like New Zealand-based Woolyarns (Perino) note, the Shenzhen fair is essential for reaching the ‘knitting community’ of the Greater Guangzhou area, providing a distinct market entry point that complements the larger Shanghai autumn shows. Domestic leaders also highlight the mid-year timing as a strategic advantage, as it avoids overlaps with major overseas exhibitions and captures the high-tech requirements of the Yangtze River Delta and GBA brands.

A comprehensive value chain platform

By running alongside PH Value and Intertextile Shenzhen, Yarn Expo 2026 provides a 360-degree view of the textile value chain. From raw fiber processing to finished knitwear and smart apparel, the combined platform serves as a barometer for the technological and ecological shifts defining the industry’s future. For stakeholders looking to secure margins in an era of rapid digitalization, Shenzhen remains the indispensable mid-year destination.

Indo Dutch alliance targets textile circularity as global green jobs hit 142 mn

 

Netherlands and India formalized a roadmap to scale circular design and textile recycling. At the FICCI RECEIC Global Symposium 2026 in New Delhi, Dutch Economic Counsellor Bernd Scholtz outlined a commercially driven framework to integrate circularity into mainstream value chains. This collaboration coincides with new data from the Dutch NGO Circle Economy, revealing that the circular economy now supports between 121 million and 142 million jobs worldwide. With nearly half of these roles concentrated in the Asia-Pacific region, India is positioned as a primary hub for the next generation of industrial textile recovery.

Industrializing upstream design and material recovery

The partnership moves beyond sustainability rhetoric to address the technical bottlenecks of the fashion industry. A core priority is circular upstream design, engineering garments for longevity and recyclability from the fiber level. This commercial focus is boosted by the European Union’s 2026 ban on the destruction of unsold textiles, a move that forces global manufacturers to adopt more sophisticated inventory management and refurbishment models. For Indian exporters, the implementation of Digital Product Passports (DPPs) has become a commercial necessity, requiring transparent data on fiber origin and carbon footprints to maintain access to the lucrative Dutch and European markets.

Dealing with EPR and fiscal challenges

Scaling these circular models requires a strong policy environment, specifically through Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) and the unlocking of green finance. The recent consultation hosted by the Netherlands Embassy and GIZ India emphasized that transition costs remain a hurdle for MSMEs. However, the update to India's Solid Waste Management Rules in April 2026 has created a mandatory four-stream waste segregation system, providing a steadier supply of feedstock for textile-to-textile recycling plants. By formalizing waste collection, the sector aims to stabilize the supply chain for recycled fibers, which are projected to account for 25 per cent of leading brand profits by late 2026.

Bridging the skills gap in a developing green workforce

The Jobs & Skills Baseline’ roadmap identifies a need for specialized training in biorefining and automated textile sorting. While the Circle Economy report indicates that 58 per cent of circular jobs are currently informal, the Indo-Dutch initiative seeks to shift these roles into decent, high-skill employment. By aligning with India’s Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS), textile units are now incentivized to invest in energy-efficient systems. This shift is not merely environmental; it is an industrial upgrade designed to ensure that the 74 million circular workers in the informal sector are integrated into a modernized, tech-driven apparel economy.

Circle economy’s global mandate

Circle Economy is a Netherlands-based impact organization focused on accelerating the practical transition to a circular global economy. Operating across key markets in Europe and Asia, the group provides data-driven roadmaps to help businesses and governments eliminate waste. With a 2026 focus on ‘Decent Work’, they aim to formalize millions of jobs in the repair and recycling sectors while scaling material innovation to meet 2050 net-zero targets.

 

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.

 

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.

 

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.

 

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.

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