Posts Tagged ‘textile industry’

Textiles exports may touch $24 billion in 2010-11

Monday, May 24th, 2010

SME Times News Bureau
With the revival of demand in Western markets, India’s textile exports may grow up to $24 billion in 2010-11 from an estimated $20 billion in the previous fiscal, industry and government officials have said in New Delhi.

“In 2009-10, our textiles exports are estimated at $20 billion due to the global economic crisis. We expect exports to be $24 billion for the current fiscal,” an official in the Textile Ministry said.

The textile exports are set to move in sync with the country’s overall exports, which have been growing for six months since November, 2009.

Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO) President A Sakthivel said textile exports can reach $24 billion if the government extends a helping hand to the industry, which is facing problems.

There has been a steep rise in cotton prices, which shot up by over 20 per cent in the past six months, resulting in higher fabric costs.

“The target can be met provided the government continues some regulations on cotton and cotton yarn exports,” he said.

The government has brought cotton exports under the restricted category, with overseas shipments subject to licensing.

US and European markets, which account for 30-35 per cent of textile exports from India, have seen revival of demand across different sectors, exporters said.

The exporters are also exploring new markets like Africa, Latin America and Oceania.

“Orders are improving. Demand for fabric has also gone up,” said Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI) Secretary General D K Nair.

News Source is http://smetimes.tradeindia.com

Removing mistrust through bis coopn

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

United News of India

Setting aside political differences, India and Pakistan have decided to change public perception and remove the existing mistrust between the two countries through promotion of trade and business ties.

A two-day meeting of top Indian and Pakistani CEOs and entrepreneurs here, which concluded today, proposed several steps to aggressively pursue the benefits of economic cooperation and identified several sectors having the highest potential for bilateral cooperation.

These include energy, agriculture, health-care, information technology and education.

The conference which was inaugurated by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee yesterday, also urged the governments in both the countries to take all steps necessary to realize the tremendous potential of trade and commerce between the two countries. The meeting noted with concern that South Asia is the world’s least economically integrated region.

Mr Mukherjee, who was the External Affairs Minister when the 26/11, 2008, terror attacks on Mumbai took place, stressed the strong linkage and inter-dependence between peace and sustained economic growth and development of the two countries.

After the two-day deliberations, industry leaders of both the countries agreed that economic cooperation was crucial to peace and progress in a region that has the highest concentration of people living below the poverty line.

The participants said potential existed for the export of home textiles from Pakistan to India while a huge market existed in Pakistan for India’s polyester textiles.

In the field of IT, the fastest growing sector in both countries and the easiest area to cooperate in, India could collaborate with Pakistan by providing skilled resources at competitive rates.

Considerable potential existed for trade in agriculture through streamlining logistics and storage facilities.

The Joint Declaration said India and Pakistan could also collaborate on research for improved yields in, and greater export for, both the countries. In health-care, opportunity for collaboration existed in research and combating the three major diseases in both the countries–heart, diabetes and cancer.

For energy cooperation, the conference said both the countries had huge untapped reserves of energy and collaboration could lend impetus to accelerated growth and development.

In education, given the low average age in both countries (18.2 years in Pakistan and 22.5 years in India), education and skill development was an area of immediate concern and potential.

Cooperation and sharing of strategies in education is the best investment that both the countries can make, the Joint Declaration said.

Committees comprising business leaders from both the countries were established for IT and textile sectors while similar committees for other sectors were in the process of being set up, it added.

News’s Source is http://www.centralchronicle.com/

Dhaka textile firms lack skilled hands

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

PALPA: The cottage industries in Palpa are facing a shortage of workers after the youths from the district have been lured towards foreign employment. This situation has arisen after increasing number of youths from the district started going for foreign employment due to the low wages and irregular pay at home.

The traditional Dhaka textile industries, a hallmark of Palpa district, have been hit hard by shortage of skilled workers.

The Karki Dhaka Udhyog located in the district headquarters Tansen is facing shortage of manpower at present. This Dhaka textile factory needs approximately 60 skilled and semi-skilled workers. There are only 25 workers at present.

Proprietors of Dhaka textile industries in Palpa district say they are facing shortage of skilled human resources as an increasing number of youths started going abroad for work or those already employed at their factories left their jobs to go on foreign employment. Although more than 400

industries, including the Dhaka textile industries, have been registered in Palpa district, not even 50 per cent of them are in operation due to the shortage of skilled workers, an officer at the District Cottage and Small Industries Office said.

News Source is http://www.thehimalayantimes.com

Textile mills shut across the country in protest

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

FAISALABAD/KARACHI All the textile mills remained closed throughout the country on Tuesday in the wake of a strike call given by Value-Added Textile Forum against the yarn and cotton crisis and power load shedding.

Value-Added Textile Forum sources told TheNation that complete strike was observed in Faisalabad as well as in the country by the textile sector while some 10,000 textile mills were totally closed in Faisalabad including 400 stitching, 300 dying, 450 printing, 1,000 hosiery and 350 sizing units.

Rallies were organised in all the four districts of Faisalabad division including Jhang, Chiniot, Toba Tek Singh and Faisalabad districts. Protest were also reported from other major cities including Karachi, Gujranwala, Sialkot and Multan.

Most of the rallies were led by the factory owners. Thousands of textile workers took part in the rallies. The protesters carried banners and placards inscribed with slogans: ‘Save the Textile Industry, Save the Country and Clamp Complete ban on export of cotton and yarn’.

The activists also chanted slogans against Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and President Asif Zardari. The workers warned the government of dire consequences, asserting they would not allow anyone to play with the livelihood of the laborers.

Thousands of workers and owners of value-added textile sector took out protest processions from various places and blocked the city roads. The main protest procession was taken out from Khurrianwala Industrial Estate, which was led by Chairman Pakistan Textile Exporters Association Khurram Mukhtar and Vice Chairman Sohail Pasha and other leaders of Value-Added Textile Forum. The rally demanded total ban on export of yarn with a view to saving the industry from collapse and the workers jobs.

Read more here http://www.nation.com.pk

Indigenous industry needed to boost technical textile market

Monday, May 10th, 2010

COIMBATORE: India needed to give a push to indigenous industry in technical textile market for boosting the domestic consumption of the products, a US-based expert in the sector has said.

For boosting the domestic consumption of technical textile products, India needed indigenous industry, which can manufacture products such as diaper, feminine hygiene products, Dr Ramkumar Seshadri, Professor at Texas Tech University, USA, said in an article.

These products were still dominated by major international brands such as Pampers, Huggies and SCA-Godrej, he said adding their cost was unaffordable for common man in India.

The cost of branded diapers was around Rs.nine and this should be brought down to Rs.five for the industry to boom in India, he said.

For this to happen, India urgently needed converting sector which would take fabrics and make useful end-use products such as filters and diapers. Moreover, due to the growing domestic consumption and increase in wages, the need for consumer products at affordable rates will rise, he said.

International non-woven technical textile industry machinery makers and trade bodies should look for win-win opportunities in the creation of converting clusters, he said.

Though India has adequate good manufacturers although not of high quality, the industry at present was reluctant to invest in high-end machinery. Marketing know-how and coordinated approach towards marketing was another major factor, to boost the sector, he said.

News source is http://economictimes.indiatimes.com

Brandix Apparel City to attract Rs 5400 Cr

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

BS Reporter / Chennai/ Visakhapatnam May 04, 2010, 0:37 IST

CM Rosaiah inaugurates the park in AP Special Economic Zone

Andhra Pradesh chief minister K Rosaiah on Monday inaugurated the Brandix India Apparel City (BIAC) located in the Andhra Pradesh Special Economic Zone here.

The state government has allotted 1,000 acres of land for the project while the Centre has provided Rs 36 crore under the Union textile policy.

Speaking on the occasion, Rosaiah asked BIAC, promoted by Sri Lanka-based Brandix group, to fulfil its promise of providing employment to 60,000 people at the earliest.

He said the government was providing training to youth under Rajiv Udhyogsree to make skilled manpower available and had, so far, trained 1 million youth.

BIAC would have 20 apparel manufacturing plants, three fabric mills, eight accessories factories and one finishing plant. The apparel city would attract an investment of $1.2 billion (around Rs 5,400 crore), said Brandix group chief executive officer Ashroff Omar.

While two manufacturing units Brandix Apparel India and Ocean India (US) have already commenced exports, four others are at different stages of completion. These six companies, on completion, would cumulatively invest about $70 million (Rs 315 crore) for factory infrastructure development, he said.

Fabric companies like Fountain Set Holdings of Hong Kong, Pioneer Elastic India Quantum Clothing Indi (UK), DEB Fashion India and Seeds Intimate Apparel India have come forward to set up joint ventures in the BIAC.

Visakhapatnam would attract investments worth about Rs 68,000 crore over the next five years and see 71,000 new jobs being created. During the last three years, Vizag district attracted Rs 17,000 crore in different sectors, said K Lakshmi Narayana, major industries minister.

The Centre has sanctioned six integrated textile parks for Andhra Pradesh, including in Visakhapatnam, said Panabaaka Lakshmi, Union minister of state for textiles, adding this was the biggest textile park in Southeast Asia. This year, the textile Budget is Rs 4,500 crore. The government has allotted Rs 397 crore to promote the integrated textile parks in the country, she said.

Source of this news is http://www.business-standard.com/india/

Govt. taking steps for domestic availability of cotton, yarn

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

SME Times News Bureau | 29 Apr, 2010
The government has initiated different measures to ensure adequate domestic availability of yarn and raw cotton, Minister of State for Textiles, Panabaaka Lakshmi said on Wednesday in a written reply in the Rajya Sabha.

In a bid to ensure yarn availability for the domestic textile industry, the government has initiated a range measures including registration of yarn exports, removal of DEPB incentive on yarn exports and test check of fulfilling the hank yarn obligations to ensure adequate yarn supply to handloom weavers, said Lakshmi answering a question raised by T.T.V.Dhinakaran in the Rajya Sabha.

She further stated that Textiles Ministry has received a number of representations from garment and handloom sector regarding supply line distortions and steep increases in yarn prices.

Answering to another question, the minister added that the government has also taken a slew of measures to ensure adequate domestic availability of raw cotton, including imposition of export duty on raw cotton and cotton waste, suspension of Registration of Cotton Exports to ensure a carry forward stock of 50 lakh bales from the cotton season 2009-10.

The government has also intensified monitoring of the cotton situation through the Cotton Advisory Board, Lakshmi said.

An abrupt and abnormal increase in prices of the cotton yarn has hit the domestic textile industry. The government has decided to halt cotton exports from April 19 to ensure adequate availability of raw cotton for the domestic industry.

This is printed here http://smetimes.tradeindia.com/smetimes/news/top-stories/2010/Apr/29/

Karnataka hosts roadshow in Surat for its investor meet

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Posted: Thursday , Apr 22, 2010 at 0304 hrs
Express News Service

The Karnataka government on Wednesday organised roadshows in Surat to attract national players in the textile industry to participate in the global investors’ meet in Karnataka in the first week of June . Goolihatty D Shekhar, Minister of Textile, Youth Services and Sports in Karnataka was present in Surat on Wednesday afternoon with delegates from the textile ministry. Karnataka had recently announced a new policy ‘Suvarna Vastra Neethi’, with the aim to develop the textile industry in the state.

Senior Manager Girish Kamath said: The state government is ready to provide incentives and concessions like capital subsidy, entry tax reimbursement, land acquisition, power subsidy, among others to the investors setting up units in Karnataka. This will be in addition to the incentives provided under the TUF and SITP schemes. The state government has offered small and big textile industries players to avail these opportunities.

Surat Art Silk Cloth Manufacturers Association president Arun Jariwala said the Karnataka government should start educational courses in the state for the benefit of the youth.

This news printed in Indianexpress or view source of this news www.indianexpress.com/news/karnataka-hosts-roadshow-in-surat-for-its-investor-meet/609744/