Feedback Here

fbook  tweeter  linkin YouTube
Global contents also translated in Chinese

FW

FW

Following the adoption of a law that granted experimentation rights both in labs and fields and conduct of confined field trials of BT cotton, Ethiopia is gearing up to begin commercial sale of BT cotton in two years.

Endale Gebre, Director of agricultural bio technology sector at the Ethiopian Agricultural Research Institute, says they will sell the BT cotton seed varieties to the market in coming one or two years. He further added the confined field trail stage of the BT cotton has now entered final stages which will allow the cotton to be commercialised. The trials have been conducted for four years on four different varieties sourced from India and Sudan.

The field trial has been conducted in selected cotton growing areas of the country. Most activities have been undertaken in the North, South and Eastern parts of the country. Based on field results, Endale has confirmed Ethiopia will have a BT cotton variety in the plantations sometime soon.

Business for the textile and apparel industry in India has fallen by 30 to 40 per cent since demonetization. Since consumers at first had to make do with Rs 2,000 notes they deferred purchases. There was an abrupt decline in domestic sales which hit bottomlines. There was an immediate and total disruption. Sales were down completely. Retail counters wore a deserted look. Such headwinds are expected to persist for at least a quarter. Apparel sales are expected to recover gradually with the availability of new currency notes especially in lower denominations.

Many handloom, power loom and cottage fabric manufacturers continue to operate largely in cash. In the garment business, a large section of retailers at the bottom of the pyramid deals largely in cash.

The wedding season is on but consumers are in no rush to buy. People are opting for sober marriages and cutting down on wedding gear. The apparel sector, however, has hailed the overall scheme as good for the long term, on expectations of transparency in the entire value chain.

The Indian textile and apparel industry is estimated to be worth a $100 billion. It anticipates new measures which would inject liquidity into the system.

With the US President-elect Donald Trump’s saying he would reject TPP on his very first day in office, it has had a cascading effect. Business houses in South Korea who were looking forward to Vietnam’s ratification of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) are dejected and deeply disappointed.

The country is Vietnam’s largest provider of foreign direct investment (FDI) and the latter was poised to be one of the biggest gainers from the US-led trade deal involving 12 Pacific Rim nations. Though South Korea was not among the 12, the deal’s failure has hit the country’s industry and companies that have been struggling to maintain growth amid declining entrepreneurship and innovation.

South Korea’s largest business conglomerates, its famous chaebol, are long-term investors in Vietnam. They are attracted by low wages and the possibility of free trade with Asean members and TPP countries. However, the government of Vietnam has announced it will delay ratification of TPP, taking a wait-and-watch approach.
Indeed, Vietnam’s decisions first to join the deal and then delay ratification gave South Korean business houses a roller-coaster ride and a lot of companies rescheduled their investments, says Kim Bu-heung, leader of the international cooperation team at the Korea Federation of Textile Industries (KOFOTI) in Hanoi said.

A multimillion-dollar incentives package is helping attract Chinese garment makers to build a $20 million plant in Little Rock, Arkansas by the end of next year. In exchange for tax breaks and grants, Arkansas has been promised 400 new jobs over four years from the Tianyuan Garment Co in Suzhou Industrial Park.

One of the most significant perks the Arkansas Economic Development Commission (AEDC) given to Tianyuan is $500,000 towards training workers to work with highly automated robotic equipment. This is also significant because, according to a China Labour Bulletin report, a key issue for China’s government officials is the extent to which the country’s labour market can provide employers well-trained workers they need. In other words, there is a skills gap in China.

AEDC’s incentive package includes five years of ‘Create Rebate’ program, a benefit of about $1.6 million. The program provides annual cash payments of up to 5 per cent of a company’s annual payroll for new, full-time, permanent employees. For Tianyuan, it would be 3.9 per cent. It also includes a tax back program, a benefit of about $134,000 which provides sales and tax refunds on the purchase of building materials and taxable machinery and equipment. A $1 million Infrastructure Assistance Grant for building improvements and equipment at the site. Support for 20 work visas for the company’s employees among others

"Though value addition by the woven sub-sector is much lower than that of knitwear, it is the largest foreign currency earner for Bangladesh. The country earned $14.73 billion from woven garment exports while knitwear fetched $13.35 billion in the last fiscal year FY2015-16. Earning from RMG sector stood at $28.09 billion, 80 per cent of the total export earnings in the last FY, reveal data."

 

 

Bangladesh High dependency on imports hindering woven garments growth

 

Though value addition by the woven sub-sector is much lower than that of knitwear, it is the largest foreign currency earner for Bangladesh. The country earned $14.73 billion from woven garment exports while knitwear fetched $13.35 billion in the last fiscal year FY2015-16. Earning from RMG sector stood at $28.09 billion, 80 per cent of the total export earnings in the last FY, reveal data.

However, Bangladesh's woven garment sub-sector, unlike the knitwear, has failed to enhance value addition to the desired level over the years mainly due to the former's large dependence on imported fabrics. Woven garment makers are now able to add value to the extent of 35 to 40 per cent as they still need to import around 60 per cent of their fabrics requirements from abroad. Local textile millers, on the other hand, supply nearly 90 and 95 per cent of the required yarn and fabric to knitwear industry.

Bringing textile heritage to the to fore

Bangladesh High dependency on imports hindering woven garments

 

Entrepreneurs are increasingly moving towards backward linkages, especially in accessories, fabric for denim items and washing segment. Still larger part of the requirement of fabric is met with imports as the industry is huge capital intensive while scarcity of power is also a major obstacle to drawing investment in the sub-sector, they observed. Huge investment is required to set up a woven fabric unit while a knitwear unit can be established with comparatively less money, explains Faruque Hassan, Senior Vice-President, Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA).

Lack of fresh investment due to power shortage is marring the fortunes of the industry. There is also a suspension on gas connection to new industrial units, knowing that gas supply is a must for fabric manufacturing for its sustenance. However, the country enjoys duty benefit in many of its major markets including European Union though fabric for woven items is imported. The government provides cash incentive for using local raw materials, which helps flourishing of the backward linkage industry for the knitwear sector.

Changing Scenario

Recent years have seen improved scenario due to the integrated growth of spinning units with growth of country's stitching capacity and increased demand for yarn and fabric. There are some new additions in the knitwear such as lingerie and sportswear. Value addition is majorly happening in denim with around 30 fabric companies having their base in the country. There are 413 yarn manufacturing mills that spin 2,250 million kms of yarn annually, 792 fabric manufacturing units including 30 denim and 22 home textile with 2810 million metres capacity and 240 dyeing units having fabric processing capacity of 2720 million metres, according to BTMA. The country imported about 5.5 million bales of raw cotton in 2015.

Domestic companies are capable of meeting the demand for accessories like zippers, buttons, labels, hooks, hangers, cartoons, thread, by upto 90 per cent, helping the country reduce its dependence on imports. Bangladesh initially imported accessories from China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan and India. The backward industry contributes 15 per cent to the total garment exports.

The handloom and handicraft sector in India is looking for new markets and opportunities. Global companies are willing to tie-up with Indian weavers and artisans. While most exports to global markets registered a decline, export of handicrafts continued to grow at 17 per cent.

A MoU has been signed with 20 e-commerce companies to engage with artisans and weavers in different handloom and handicraft clusters and help them market their products directly. This will go a long way in ensuring the clusters get the right price for their product as they are able to sell their product directly to the consumer.

Steps are being taken for skilling weavers, giving them design inputs, quality raw material, tools and upgrading their looms to empower them so that they continue to remain engaged in this craft. At design workshops weavers and artisans are informed about current market trends and the demands of the market.

Many weavers and artisans have become workers and laborers in the hands of traders or exporters. They get paid wages on a daily basis on whatever work they do a day, so instead of selling their craft and talent, they are now selling their labor. As a result, this has disinterested the young generation.

Textile mills and cotton-weaving powerlooms in Ichalkaranji, better known as the Manchester of Maharashtra, are facing a strange situation. Since demonetisation, cloth traders have been offering them payment only in invalid currency. Mills unwilling to accept such payment face the threat of cancelled orders.

Since mills have no option but to refuse, contracts worth more than Rs 100 crores have been scrapped. The demand for chemicals at the looms has gone down drastically due to cancellation of orders. The nearly 1.25 lakh looms in the town were expecting good business after the bountiful monsoon this year and had secured orders from north India and Karnataka. But their expectations have been shattered.

In just 15 days, the daily turnover at the textile hub has fallen from Rs 45 crores to Rs 13 crores. In turn workers at these units haven’t got their wages. There are more than 80,000 workers engaged in the looms and the yarning, sizing and processing units. Most of these workers are from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. Ichalkaranji is a major textile hub in the country and sends ready made clothes to Ahmedabad, Mumbai, Madhya Pradesh, Delhi, West Bengal and Karnataka. It has thrived on the booming cotton trade that caters to the needs of major national and international brands.

Tamil Nadu’s Tirupur cluster is pressing for the right infrastructure such as a world-class design studio, a research and development center and an incubation centre for technical textiles. It feels these infrastructure facilities will facilitate rapid growth of not only the existing textile business but also enable its foray into the niche segments creating quantum growth opportunities to the industry.

The cluster is interested in having a focused and dedicated agency for the knitwear sector, similar to the silk or the coir board, which could serve as a catalyst for rapid growth of this segment.

Tirupur is the knitwear capital of the country with a 46 per cent market share in knitwear exports. It aims for a turnover of Rs lakh crore by 2020 from the present Rs 35,000 crores. Exporters say housing and hostel facilities will attract and retain skilled laborers. They are also looking forward to the implementation of the Factories (Amendment) Bill 2016, which would benefit the garment sector and will be helpful to fulfill buyers’ compliances.

The cluster argues since apparels are essentials, they should attract a lower slab rate under GST considering that the cumulative tax on textile products, including the non-availability of input tax credit on the inter-state purchase of cotton and other raw materials, presently comes to only around 7 to 8 per cent.

Ludhiana, best known for its woolens, is now a picture of gloom post demonetisation. The city’s small and medium textile enterprises (SMEs) were one of the first victims of the systemic shock. Across the region, SMEs, which have an annual turnover ranging from Rs 25 lakh to Rs 10 crores, have seen massive dips in production, which most unit owners pegged at 80 per cent.

The demonetisation has had a cascading effect on this sector. Liquidity crunch brought on by the move caused demand to plummet in retail markets, and orders stopped almost overnight. The Rs 50,000 weekly withdrawal limit from current accounts has also made it difficult to pay workers; most of them daily-wage migrant labourers. So much so, that many of them are now leaving town.

Government data shows that the knitwear industry in Ludhiana employs close to 3,80,000 people. Between 70 to 80 per cent of all woolen garments supplied to North India comes from this town. A majority of these units deal with traders in the unorganised sector across – small retailers who do not access the banking infrastructure and depend on cash for their transactions. The traders also do not pay Value Added Tax and their transactions are therefore unaccounted-for.

The timing of the demonetisation has been fatal for the garment industry. Textile units which produce winter garments count on the September-November period to boost profits and the smaller units get 80 per cent of all their revenue in this season. This makes them extremely vulnerable to big-ticket reforms that could have a short-term fallout in these months.

Mumbai is ready to host the next edition of ITME. Twenty four product launches, 1,050 exhibitors, 38 countries, 17 chapters and 11 exhibiting halls the six-day fair, is the largest and apex exhibition for textile machinery and technology in India and one of the most awaited business event for textile industry members. The exhibition will be held at Nesco grounds, Goregaon, Mumbai from December 3 to 8.

Gujarat and Karnataka, two key states with a strong presence in textiles will be participating as state partners. This once in four years mega event is also supported by Department of Heavy Industry, Textile Ministry, and the government of India. The government of Maharashtra is also the state partner. That makes the exhibition the most important platform for the government officials and the industry members to interact and work together.

This is the only textile engineering exhibition with a strong presence and participation from both state and central governments where the idea of ‘Make in India’ in textile engineering segment shall be promoted to visitors and also propagate government schemes and incentives for the textile industry in India. India ITME Society is four-decade old non-profit organisation with a vision to support the industry through exhibitions facilitating investments and joint ventures and technology transfer. Foreign and domestic business visitors, academicians, research scholars, government officials from Philippians, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Srilanka, Iran, Turkey, Brazil, Indonesia, Poland, Malaysia etc.

Page 2984 of 3679
 
LATEST TOP NEWS
 


 
MOST POPULAR NEWS
 
VF Logo