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Safety standards at readymade garment industries in Bangladesh have improved. Factory owners have achieved 44 per cent repair work so far. Bangladesh had made remarkable progress in allowing unionism in factories. However, factory owners have to bring about a change in their mindset so that trade unions can function effectively for realising the demands of the workers.

Currently 92 per cent of factories pay the minimum wage to workers. Although safety conditions in member factories of the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association and the Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association, two major trade bodies in the apparel sector, have improved a lot, conditions have not improved in 700 sub-contracting factories.

So the government and garment owners have to work to improve safety conditions in the sub-contracting factories, most of which are not members of the two garment trade bodies. International retailers and brands, which source garment items from Bangladeshi factories, had committed to pay more for garment items but have not done so. Rather, the prices of Bangladeshi garment items have decreased by 41 per cent over the last 15 years.

After the Rana Plaza disaster, compensation was indeed paid to victims, but whether it’s adequate is a matter for doubt. Also those responsible for the disaster have yet to be dealt with.

ITM 2016 International Textile Machinery Exhibition and concurrent HIGHTEX 2016 International Technical Textile and Nonwoven Trade Fair to be held at Tuyap Fair Convention and Congress Center from June 1 to 4 are expected to attract 1,200 exhibitors and more than 60,000 visitors from 72 countries. At ITM 2016, latest technologies nationally developed in textile machinery industry will be debut. ITM and HIGHTEX fairs are considered to be the largest gathering for textile technologies, which Turkey and the region have hosted so far.

Held in Istanbul, one of the world’s most strategic locations in geographical terms, will be a meeting point for all the industry representatives. Istanbul, the West’s doors to the East and the East’s doors to the West has a position as the centre of textile industry. ITM 2016 where brands intending to become one of the actors in the world market will exhibit its innovative technology investments and new products will be the address for textile industry in 2016.

HIGHTEX 2016, the 6th International Technical Textile and Nonwoven Trade Fair, the first and only event in its field, raw materials for technical textiles, intermediary and final products and production technologies will be seen together. The fact that HIGHTEX 2016, the largest gathering for technical textiles in the Middle East and Eastern Europe, will be concurrently held with ITM 2016 will create a highly positive and efficient synergy.

Invista, one of the world’s largest integrated producers of polymers and fibers, showcased its performance credentials at Performance Days in Munich, and held a series of informative and educational workshops for the first time to provide guidance on cooling and compression fabrics across its COOLMAX® and LYCRA® SPORT brands.

The workshops, by Huw Williams, Global Segment Director Activewear & Outdoor and Simon Whitmarsh-Knight, EMEA Accounts Director Activewear and Outdoor from Invista Apparel, highlighted common problems and misconceptions around cooling and compression fabrics, the importance of testing and understanding consumer needs, as well as market insights into the move away from fabric ‘wicking’ towards ‘cool and dry’ and the different types of compression.

According to Simon Whitmarsh-Knight, consumers expect more from their active outfits/sports gear but not everything that stretches is necessarily made with LYCRA® fiber and not all performance fabrics are created equal. We have a clear set of standards and rigorously test fibers and fabrics specifically for performance sports use ensuring any garment featuring our branded hangtag will deliver high performance and consistent quality without compromising any dimension of comfort.

The workshops also outlined key trends in the performance sector with athleisure and commuter wear trends driving the need for garments to perform beyond the gym, creating greater demand for fabrics offering cool and dry moisture management, compression and soft shaping.

Elin Astrom, Sustainability Manager at Swedish fashion retail giant H&M, has ureged the fashion world to follow the mantra of reduce, reuse and recycle to save Mother Earth. H&M is on a mission to reduce the environmental impact from the fashion industry by limiting the amount of textiles that end up in landfills and hence has come up with its first sustainability line for Indian market. The brand has shipped its Conscious Exclusive 2016 Collection to stores globally and to India. This is the first time the line's been brought to the country.

Created in collaboration with the iconic Musee des Arts Decoratifs, Palais Du Louvre, the Conscious Exclusive 2016 Collection is inspired by the archives of the museum and is fabricated entirely from sustainable material. H&M, which forayed into India last year, has been receiving wonderful business in the country. This is evident from the fact that there are five stores in India, including one that is opening at Noida's DLF Mall of India, in a short span of six months.

Safety standards at readymade garment industries in Bangladesh have improved. Factory owners have achieved 44 per cent repair work so far. Bangladesh had made remarkable progress in allowing unionism in factories. However, factory owners have to bring about a change in their mindset so that trade unions can function effectively for realising the demands of the workers.

Currently 92 per cent of factories pay the minimum wage to workers. Although safety conditions in member factories of the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) and the Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BKMEA), two major trade bodies in the apparel sector, have improved a lot, conditions have not improved in 700 sub-contracting factories.

So the government and garment owners have to work to improve safety conditions in the sub-contracting factories, most of which are not members of the two garment trade bodies. International retailers and brands, which source garment items from Bangladeshi factories, had committed to pay more for garment items but have not done so. Rather, the prices of Bangladeshi garment items have decreased by 41 per cent over the last 15 years.

After the Rana Plaza disaster, compensation was indeed paid to victims, but whether it’s adequate is a matter for doubt. Also those responsible for the disaster have yet to be dealt with.

When it comes to sustainability, Copenhagen Fashion Summit is far from alone in the month of May. Multiple major international organisations in the fashion and textile industry have chosen to hold their biggest events of the year in Copenhagen in the same week as the summit.

Numerous international companies have decided to schedule their annual summits and events the same week in Copenhagen, with big industry players like Planet Textiles and Sustainable Apparel Coalition (SAC) showing their presence. SAC will kick off the week with their annual Full Membership Meeting taking place on 9-10 May at the Copenhagen Concert Hall, which will also frame the events of both Planet Textiles’ 2016 International Sustainable Textile Summit as well as the Copenhagen Fashion Summit. The SAC meeting – where the Higg Index, a tool that measures sustainability impact, will be discussed – is hosted by one of the founding members H&M as well as Danish Fashion Institute, Bestseller and IC Group and will be attended by international members ranging from Nike and Target to Burberry and Kering.

The day before Copenhagen Fashion Summit May 11, the Planet Textiles 2016: The Sustainable Textile Summit will take place. Initially launched in 2010 in Shanghai, the textile summit has established itself as Asia’s leading meeting place for sustainable textiles. In a unique collaboration with MCL News & Media, SAC and Messe Frankfurt, Planet Textiles chose to focus on Copenhagen in 2016.

Orient Craft, an Indian company exporting to retailers such as Marks & Spencer in Britain, is deeply worried about the June 23 referendum that decides whether Britain exits the European Union. Orient’s nearly one-third of total apparel exports are destined for Britain and Europe. And many other Indian companies are expressing similar concerns over the upcoming vote. However, company Chairman Sudhir Dhingra points out the United Kingdom (UK) by itself is a very small market compared to the rest of Europe.

Due to the deep historical links between the two countries, Britain has served for decades as the gateway to Europe for Indian businessmen. In recent years, a fast-growing domestic economy has put more money in the pockets of Indian business magnates as their investments in Britain have grown in scale and size, making India the third largest foreign direct investor behind the United States and France. In 2014, Indian investment in Britain increased by as much as 64 per cent.

Meanwhile, the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) warns the flow of these investments will suffer if Britain chooses to leave the European Union as this will create uncertainty for Indian businesses.

Every piece of clothing being bought has had an impact on the planet before its even brought home. First of all, there’s water consumption. Two billion pairs of jeans are produced every year, and a typical pair takes 7,000 litres of water to produce. For a t-shirt, it takes 2,720 litres of water to make just one – that’s the average water consumption of a person over three years old!

 

Fashions dark side is its impact on environment

Every piece of clothing being bought has had an impact on the planet before its even brought home. First of all, there’s water consumption. Two billion pairs of jeans are produced every year, and a typical pair takes 7,000 litres of water to produce. For a t-shirt, it takes 2,720 litres of water to make just one – that’s the average water consumption of a person over three years old!

 

Secondly, there’s the dying process of which 1.7 million tonnes of various chemicals are used; not to mention the hazardous chemicals like PFCs that leave a permanent impact on our environment. And what about the clothing that doesn’t make it to market? An estimated 400 billion square meters of textiles are produced annually, of which 60 billion square meters are left on the cutting room floor. Each year over 80 billion pieces of clothing are produced worldwide, and after its short lifespan, three out of four garments will end up in landfills or be incinerated. Only a quarter will be recycled.

Retail growth

Fashions dark side

A report by UK-based NGO WRAP said, lower prices and reduced demand lessen the incentive for collecting used textiles, which could lead to more going to landfill. And as recent Goldman Environmental prizewinner Zuzana Čaputová has shown, no one wants more landfills in their town. In an era of fashion bloggers and getting instant fame, being seen in the same outfit has been enough to warrant a ‘tsk-tsk’ from the fashion police. Just over the last five years, the top fast fashion retailers grew 9.7 per cent per year, topping the 6.8 per cent of growth of traditional apparel companies. 

According to ‘Plenitude: The New Economics of True Wealth’ by Juliet B Schor, Americans for instance, consumes three times as much as their ancestors did 50 years ago, and they buy twice as many items of clothing as they did 20 years ago. In 1991, the average American bought 34 items of clothing each year. By 2007, they were buying 67 items every year. That’s a new piece of clothing every four to five days.

Environmental impact

If one stays away from impulse purchases, it can make a difference. It’s not just about saving pennies – in the lead up to the third anniversary of the collapse of the textile factory, Rana Plaza in Bangladesh, it’s as much thinking about who made your clothes as well as the environmental impact it has made. And if one thinks dumping a bag of clothing at the local thrift store is a sustainable idea, think again. H&M’s recent World Recycling Week, in which their aim was to collect and recycle 1,000 tons of used clothing, is an ‘illusion’ of what true sustainability is, as only one per cent of collected clothing can be used as recycled fibers.

Nearly 95 per cent of discarded clothing can be upcycled or recycled. And fashion trends come in waves, so to hang onto 10-year-old T-shirts is a good idea. One could actually be wearing it again in 20 years time.

The third anniversary of Rana Plaza, the deadliest tragedy in Bangladeshs’ garment industry, which claimed the lives of more than a thousand workers in is round the corner. The attention now turns to the millions of garment workers, surviving on poverty wages, who make the clothes we wear. What can we do to help these workers, out of which 80 per cent of whom are women. Certainly not to only buy vintage or second hand - as two fashionistas recently proposed on a BBC program. Garment workers desperately need to keep their jobs, so boycotting brands is not the way forward. They want to work. In many countries the garment industry is one of the few avenues to financial independence for women.

According to United Nations Guiding Principles, multinational companies are responsible for the working conditions at their suppliers. Yet many fashion brands have little control or little idea of how much workers are being paid, how long they are working or how safe the factories are, and insufficient will to do anything about it. Brands’ short lead times, last minute changes to production specifications, and a general lack of consideration of how their demands impact on workers, put an impossible burden on the women making our clothes. Any change in the global garment industry has to be systemic and enforceable. Acting alone will not bring about the necessary changes needed to improve the lives of garment workers.

There needs to be a critical mass of brands to wake up and realise that their supply chain operations are abusive and unsustainable.

According to Union Minister Santosh Kumar Gangwar, India's textile export remained flat at $40 billion in the last fiscal, as compared to $41.4 billion in 2014-15. However, an export during last fiscal was lower than the target $47.5 billion set by the government for textile and clothing. The subdued trend in export was due to recessionary trend in Europe and the US markets, experts say. About the technical textile sector, the minister said the country sees a huge growth potential in the sector. Gangwar pointed out that the growth rate of technical textile sector is expected to be much higher.

Based on past trends of growth and estimated end user segment growth, the Working Group on Technical Textiles for 12th Five Year Plan (FYP) has projected the market size to Rs 1.58 lakh crore for the year 2016-17 with a growth rate of 20 per cent. According to the minister, Technotex exemplifies the immense potential for trade and investment between India and foreign countries in technical textile sector.

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