FW
India’s National Fibre Scheme decouples textiles from global supply risks

For decades the Indian dominated spinning, weaving, and garment exports while remaining paradoxically dependent on imported man-made fibres and specialty raw materials. This imbalance long viewed as the industry’s most persistent vulnerability has now become the focus of a sweeping policy overhaul. With the Union Budget 2026-27, the government has unveiled the National Fibre Scheme, a strategy designed to reposition India not just as a manufacturing hub but as a primary producer of high-value fibres. The programme is an attempt to secure upstream control over raw materials, reduce exposure to global supply disruptions, and align the domestic industry with the fibre composition of the modern global apparel market.
The initiative arrives at a critical moment. Global fashion supply chains are shifting toward synthetics, recycled fibres, and technical materials used in everything from performance wear to industrial textiles. India’s reliance on cotton, once a competitive advantage has increasingly left the industry mismatched with evolving demand patterns.
Rebalancing India’s fibre economy
The global textile economy now operates on a roughly 60:40 consumption ratio favouring MMFs over natural fibres. Polyester, viscose, nylon, and specialty technical materials dominate categories ranging from athleisure to medical textiles. Yet India’s fibre production structure still reflects its agrarian legacy, with cotton forming the backbone of domestic supply.
This imbalance has forced manufacturers to import synthetic inputs, particularly specialty fibres required for performance garments and technical applications. The National Fibre Scheme seeks to close that gap by scaling domestic capacity. Government projections indicate that India’s fibre production will rise from approximately 15.2 million metric tonnes in 2025 to 22.8 million metric tonnes by 2030-31. This increase is expected to reduce import dependency while boosting the country’s share in global fibre production.
The policy framework also anticipates a 22 per cent reduction in fibre imports within five years. By increasing local manufacturing of synthetic and specialty fibres, policymakers hope to insulate garment exporters from volatile international raw-material prices, a persistent challenge that has eroded margins in recent years.
Globally, India’s share of fibre production is expected to increase to about 8-12 per cent during the same period. If achieved, this shift would transform the country from a downstream processor to a strategically integrated textile economy.
Employment generation is another major focus. The policy estimate the creation of nearly eight million new jobs across fibre production, processing, technical textiles, and associated value chains.
Capital for a synthetic future
To increase the shift toward MMFs, the government has spread the scope of the Production-Linked Incentive programme for textiles. The scheme, has now been extended until March 31, 2026 to attract additional participants.
One of the most consequential policy adjustments has been the reduction of minimum investment thresholds. Large players that previously required a minimum commitment of Rs 300 crore can now participate with investments starting at Rs 150 crore. This will encourage mid-sized manufacturers to enter the synthetic and technical textile segments, so far dominated by a small group of integrated conglomerates.
Early indicators suggest the policy is gaining traction. By February 2026, the Ministry of Textiles had received 84 new investment proposals under the revised PLI framework. Together these projects add up investment of approximately Rs 10,789 crore.
Analysts view this wave of capital commitments as the first real sign that India’s manufacturing base is shifting toward the high-margin synthetic segment. Investments are expected to increase domestic production of polyester filament yarn, recycled fibres, and advanced technical materials.
Closing the upstream efficiency gap
For years, policymakers have argued that India’s aspiration to dominate the fibre-to-fashion value chain has been constrained by fragmentation in upstream supply networks. Cotton farmers, fibre processors, and textile manufacturers often operate in silos, leading to inefficiencies that affect the entire production system.
The National Fibre Scheme introduces a fibre-neutral policy framework intended to address this imbalance. Rather than favouring a single raw material like cotton, the new approach prioritizes technological innovation and supply readiness across all fibre categories.
An integral initiative is research and development. Government agencies and private laboratories are working toward the filing of more than 100 new patents in fibre engineering, including advanced synthetic blends, biodegradable polymers, and performance materials tailored for technical textiles. Also, agricultural reforms linked to the programme aim to improve raw-material quality through certified seed adoption and improved fibre grading systems. These measures are designed to raise the consistency and reliability of domestic fibre supply.
Another important aspect is rationalizing import duties on raw materials and intermediates. The objective is to create a balanced tariff structure that protects domestic manufacturers without inflating input costs for downstream producers.
Infrastructure for a fibre-to-fashion ecosystem
Scaling fibre production requires not only capital but also industrial infrastructure capable of supporting integrated manufacturing. This is where the government’s PM MITRA Mega Textile Parks programme plays a critical role. The seven parks planned under the initiative are designed as fully integrated industrial clusters where fibre production, spinning, weaving, processing, and garment manufacturing coexist within a single ecosystem. The concept aims to replicate the scale efficiencies seen in leading textile manufacturing nations such as China and Vietnam.
By early 2026, land acquisition for all seven parks had been completed. Infrastructure development projects worth Rs 2,590.99 crore are currently underway. The government expects these parks to function as anchor ecosystems for the National Fibre Scheme, providing the industrial backbone required to support large-scale synthetic fibre manufacturing.
Integrated parks also address one of India’s long-standing cost disadvantages: logistics inefficiency. By clustering production stages in a single location, manufacturers can reduce transportation costs, shorten lead times, and improve supply-chain transparency.
As the industry shifts toward synthetic fibres and advanced materials, workforce capabilities must also evolve. Traditional textile training programmes have focused on spinning and garmenting skills, leaving a gap in polymer science, technical fabric engineering, and automated processing systems.
The government’s Samarth skilling programme has therefore, been upgraded to address the labour demands of the next generation textile economy. The Samarth 2.0 initiative aims to train workers in specialised manufacturing processes associated with man-made fibres and technical textiles.
As of 2026, the programme has already skilled approximately 5.41 lakh individuals. Notably, women constitute around 88 per cent of these trainees, reflecting the sector’s continued role as one of India’s largest employers of female labour.
Sustainability and decarbonisation push
Indian manufacturers are increasingly aligning with environmental compliance expectations. For example, the collaboration between Arvind Limited and the innovation platform Fashion for Good under the ‘Future Forward Factories’ initiative. Launched in late 2025, the partnership produced the country’s first open-source blueprint for near-zero-emission dyeing and processing of both knitted and woven fabrics. The project focuses on integrating renewable energy sources with advanced dry-processing technologies that drastically reduce water consumption.
By retrofitting its facilities with these innovations, Arvind has shown that environmentally sustainable textile production can also increase export competitiveness. Global brands increasingly prioritise suppliers capable of meeting stringent environmental standards, making decarbonised manufacturing a strategic advantage rather than merely a compliance requirement.
The initiative also complements the objectives of the National Fibre Scheme, which emphasises innovation and sustainability as key drivers of long-term growth.
The road to a $350 billion textile economy
The National Fibre Scheme forms part of a broader policy architecture aimed at transforming India’s textile sector into a $350 billion industry by 2030. Achieving that scale will require rapid growth in three priority segments: MMF apparel, technical textiles, and sustainable garment manufacturing.
Export growth is central to this strategy. India’s textile exports currently hover around $37 billion, but policymakers have set an ambitious target of $100 billion by the end of the decade. Reaching that milestone will require a CAGR of 17 per cent, far higher than the sector’s recent growth.
Trade diplomacy is expected to play a crucial role. Ongoing negotiations for free trade agreements with the European Union and the United Kingdom could grant Indian textile exporters duty-free access to some of the world’s largest apparel markets. Such agreements would improve India’s competitiveness against rival exporters in Southeast Asia.
The integration of fibre production, advanced manufacturing, and sustainable practices could ultimately reshape India’s position within the global textile hierarchy. Instead of remaining a downstream assembler dependent on imported inputs, the country is attempting to control every stage of the value chain from molecular fibre engineering to finished garments.
Whether the National Fibre Scheme can fully deliver on its ambitious targets remains to be seen. Yet its intent is unmistakable: to convert India’s textile industry from a manufacturing powerhouse into a raw-material sovereign capable of influencing the global fibre economy itself.
Specialist Sports fuels multi-category expansion with supply chain digitization
In a strategic move to modernize its product development framework, Southampton-based Specialist Sports Group has transitioned from fragmented manual workflows to an integrated digital ecosystem. By adopting Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) and Purchase Order Management (POM) solutions from Discover e-Solutions (DeSL), the performance sports distributor is dismantling a legacy system of disparate Excel spreadsheets and email-heavy communication. This shift is designed to centralize critical data - ranging from Bills of Materials (BOMs) and size charts to Requests for Quotation (RFQs) - within a single, real-time platform. The digital overhaul addresses a common industry bottleneck where manual "copy and paste" tasks across design software often lead to data siloes and increased error margins in technical specifications.
Strengthening global distribution and procurement control
The integration extends beyond design into the commercial logistics of the brand, as the new system links directly with Microsoft Business Central to refine procurement cycles. This connectivity allows for more precise timing of purchase order placements, a critical factor for ensuring on-time deliveries within the competitive performance sports market. By utilizing a live portal for factory collaboration, Specialist Sports can now share high-accuracy product information with manufacturing partners and global brands like adidas without the traditional reliance on PDF exports and lengthy email chains. Amandine Tentelier, Head - Product Development, noted, centralizing this information provides the operational bandwidth necessary to reduce complexity as the agency scales its international presence.
Scaling operations for new athletic categories
This digital transformation serves as a foundational step for Specialist Sports’ broader ambition to diversify its portfolio into additional sporting categories. By automating the administrative burden of tech pack management and sample reviews, the agency is redirecting its internal capacity toward new product initiatives beyond its existing licensed teamwear operations. With over 30 years of experience in brand marketing and a warehouse infrastructure capable of global fulfillment, the adoption of AI-powered PLM tools positions the company to maintain high-quality control standards while increasing its total development volume. The transition signals a growing trend among mid-sized distribution agencies to leverage enterprise-level software to compete with larger, vertically integrated retail entities.
A UK-based performance sports distribution and brand marketing agency, Specialist Sports specializes in sales strategy, product creation, and logistics for global partners. The company manages comprehensive market entry and fulfillment services, supported by in-house creative teams and a dedicated global distribution network. To facilitate this growth, they have partnered with DeSL, a Cardiff-headquartered provider of AI-powered PLM and digital transformation software. Founded in 2002, DeSL delivers modular solutions for the fashion and footwear industries, focusing on improving speed, sustainability, and supplier collaboration across the global textile value chain.
Shima Seiki, CLO Virtual Fashion integrate systems to bridge digital design and knitwear production
The global shift toward digitized apparel supply chains has gained significant momentum as Shima Seiki MFG, Ltd. and CLO Virtual Fashion announce a strategic technical integration. This partnership addresses a long-standing friction point in the knitwear sector: the disconnect between high-fidelity 3D garment simulation and actual machine-executable data. By aligning Shima Seiki’s APEXFiz design software with CLO’s simulation engine, the collaboration moves beyond aesthetic visualization to create a functional digital thread. This development allows designers to transition from a virtual concept to a physical knitted product with a high degree of technical accuracy, effectively reducing the need for multiple physical prototypes and accelerating the traditional product development cycle.
Streamlining workflows through automated data exchange
Technical barriers that previously required the manual layering of material data are being replaced by a sophisticated ‘one-click’ import-export environment. Historically, designers using both platforms faced a fragmented process where material properties and structural settings had to be adjusted individually upon transfer. Under the new protocol, scheduled for a phased rollout starting in March 2026, Shima Seiki’s V-09C update will introduce a dedicated export function tailored for the CLO ecosystem. Concurrently, the CLO 2026.0 enterprise release will feature a specialized integration plugin. This automation is designed to optimize resources for large-scale manufacturers and independent labels alike, ensuring that digital assets are not only visually realistic but also structurally compatible with computerized flat knitting machines.
Expanding knitwear utility into the metaverse and gaming
The implications of this partnership extend into the burgeoning digital-only fashion markets, including gaming and the metaverse. By leveraging CLO’s strength in high-quality animation and movement simulation, knitwear designs created in APEXFiz can now be deployed in virtual environments with lifelike physics. This versatility opens new revenue streams for brands, allowing them to monetize the same digital asset across physical retail and virtual platforms. As the fashion industry faces increasing pressure to adopt sustainable practices, this "digital-first" approach provides a data-backed solution to overproduction by ensuring that a garment’s fit and drape are perfected in a virtual space before a single centimeter of yarn is consumed.
Headquartered in Wakayama, Japan, Shima Seiki has been a dominant force in the textile machinery industry since its inception in 1962. The company is renowned for inventing the WholeGarment technology, which allows for the production of seamless knitwear. Today, Shima Seiki focuses on integrating its hardware with advanced software solutions like APEXFiz to support a sustainable, on-demand manufacturing model. With a global presence spanning major fashion capitals, the firm continues to lead the industry’s transition toward Total Fashion Integration, combining mechanical precision with cutting-edge 3D design capabilities to improve fiscal and environmental efficiency for global retailers.
Human ingenuity and AI synergy to drive India’s $100 billion textile ambition
Despite the dual pressures of Red Sea logistical disruptions and a projected 9–10 per cent contraction in exports to the US for 2026, the Indian textile industry is transitioning toward a high-growth trajectory.
Speaking at the ITAMMA Awards in Coimbatore on March 7, 2026, industry leaders emphasized, the sector has moved past its recessionary phase. The optimistic outlook is supported by a robust policy framework, including the removal of anti-dumping duties on man-made fiber (MMF) raw materials and the alignment of the MMF value chain under a unified 5per cent GST slab. These structural corrections, alongside newly effective Free Trade Agreements with the UK and UAE, are essential levers for India to capture market share under the global ‘China+1’ sourcing strategy.
Balancing automation with human-centric innovation
The next phase of industrial evolution is being defined by a strategic blend of advanced technology and human capital. S Krishnakumar, Deputy Chairman, SIMA, notes, the time has come to perform by way of innovation taking advantage of AI, highlighting the necessity of smart manufacturing to maintain global competitiveness. D Venkadesan, CEO, Sri Jayajothi and Company, cautioned, technology remains a ‘crutch’ without empowered personnel. This perspective shifts the focus toward a culture of continuous improvement where AI serves as a tool for human ingenuity. With the Union Budget 2026-27 introducing five mega schemes to boost productivity, the industry is positioned to bridge infrastructure deficits and achieve its $100 billion export target by 2030 through value-added, sustainable manufacturing.
The Indian Textile Accessories and Machinery Manufacturers' Association (ITAMMA) has supported the textile engineering sector since 1948. Representing a diverse membership across spinning, weaving, and processing segments, the association fosters global competitiveness through export excellence initiatives and ‘Make in India’ benchmarks. ITAMMA continues to drive innovation by integrating modern automation and AI into traditional manufacturing frameworks.
ATA to transition into a competitive global hub with ITMF membership
The Azerbaijan Textile Association (ATA) aims to transition from a regional producer to a competitive global hub. The association aims to integrate the nation’s burgeoning apparel sectori to network representing 90 per cent of global production. It has officially joined the International Textile Manufacturers Federation (ITMF) that grants local manufacturers exclusive access to international trade data and technical benchmarks. Farida Akhundova, Executive Director, ATA, emphasizes, this partnership is a ‘strategic milestone’ designed to bridge the gap between local manufacturing capabilities and the rigorous innovation requirements of Western and Asian retail markets.
Capitalizing on production growth and export diversification
The integration comes as Azerbaijan’s light industry demonstrates robust momentum, with clothing production value reaching 19.8 million manats in early 2026 - a nearly 4 per cent Y-o-Y increase. Cotton fabric output has similarly scaled, rising 9.5 per cent to exceed 30 million sq m. Leveraging its membership, ATA plans to utilize ITMF’s ‘Spinners’ and ‘Home Textiles’ committees to deepen the cotton value chain, shifting from raw fiber exports to high-margin finished apparel. With a signed Tripartite Action Plan already in place, the sector is currently executing a roadmap to host the 2029 Annual ITMF Conference, positioning Baku as a focal point for future textile diplomacy and sustainable manufacturing.
Sector leadership and modernization
Established to advocate for Azerbaijan’s light industry, ATA represents major manufacturers like Baku Textile Factory and Giltex LLC. Focused on high-performance apparel and cotton wovens, the association aims to achieve a $100 billion national export target by 2030 through Japanese and German technological integration and expanded European market access.
Indian textile industry accelerates massive export diversification strategy
The Indian textile industry is accelerating a massive export diversification strategy to mitigate the impact of escalating global trade protectionism and potential 50 per cent duties in traditional Western strongholds. By targeting 40 emerging and non-traditional markets, domestic manufacturers are shifting their focus toward high-value woven menswear segments. Data from recent trade forecasts indicates, while the US remains a critical partner, the reliance on single-corridor trade is being replaced by a multi-national approach. This shift is prompted by a need to maintain the current 12-15 per cent growth trajectory in apparel exports, ensuring that supply chains remain resilient even if major North American or European partners implement restrictive border adjustments.
Technical innovation as a competitive advantage
To capture these new markets, Indian mills are integrating next-generation cellulosic fibers and ‘liquid’ drape technologies into their Spring-Summer 2026-27 collections. Industry experts suggest, he move toward ‘City Prepper’ technical wovens and refined linen-silk blends provides a necessary edge against low-cost competitors. The objective is to move from basic commodity volume to high-margin, purpose-driven textiles, states Rajesh Kumar, a senior trade analyst specializing in South Asian exports. By adopting moisture-managing Lyocell and 3D-textured jacquards, exporters are aligning with global ‘Sandstorm’ aesthetics, allowing them to penetrate premium retail tiers in the Middle East and Southeast Asia, where demand for sophisticated, climate-adaptive menswear is rising.
Strengthening India’s global fabric presence
As a cornerstone of India’s industrial output, the textile sector contributes significantly to manufacturing GDP and employment. Historically a leader in cotton staples, the industry now targets $100 billion in exports by 2030. Focusing on high-performance wovens and sustainable blends, it seeks to dominate premium global menswear markets through enhanced technological integration and aggressive fiscal scaling.
AEPC intensifies call for increase in IES rate by RBI
The Apparel Export Promotion Council (AEPC) has intensified its call for the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to increase the Interest Equalization Scheme (IES) rate from 2.75 per cent to 5 per cent for manufacturing exporters. Led by Dr A Sakthivel,Chairman, AEPC, during a high-level meeting with RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra in mid-February 2026, this advocacy aims to offset the sharp rise in borrowing costs currently impacting the sector. As of March 2026, Indian exporters are contending with a perfect storm of logistics challenges; freight rates for European routes have surged from $500 to $4,000, while the rerouting of vessels around the Cape of Good Hope has added 14 to 20 days to transit times. This delay has significantly strained working capital cycles, particularly for MSMEs which constitute the backbone of the industry.
Enhancing liquidity to secure 2030 export targets
To safeguard India's $100 billion apparel export target by 2030, the AEPC is also urging the removal of the Rs 50 lakh cap on IES benefits, proposing instead a graded limit based on turnover. This push for liquidity comes as cumulative Ready-Made Garment (RMG) exports for April–January 2025-26 reached $13.13 billion, a modest 1.6 per cent growth despite the 3.8 per cent decline recorded in January 2026. MSME exporters play a critical role in employment, but procedural delays and high interest rates are undermining their competitiveness, stated Dr. Sakthivel. By aligning financial support with the newly ratified India-EU FTA, which provides zero-duty access to major markets, the industry seeks to transform these logistics-induced challenges into an opportunity for long-term structural resilience and digital-first credit accessibility. AEPC is India’s nodal agency for promoting garment exports, representing over 8,000 manufacturers. It facilitates trade via global expos and policy advocacy, focusing on high-growth categories like Man-Made Fiber (MMF) and technical textiles. Founded in 1978, it now leads sustainable manufacturing initiatives under India’s Export Promotion Mission.
From London to Tokyo, premiumization redefines retail and office markets

Global real estate landscape has changed. Gone are the cautious narratives of recovery that defined the post-pandemic years. Today, flight to quality is reshaping markets across continents, turning prime retail streets and trophy office towers into some of the most coveted assets in the world. Cushman & Wakefield’s latest reports, including the 35th edition of Main Streets Across the World and India Outlook 2026, reveal a scenario where premiumization is no longer aspirational, it is the defining trend of 2026.
The new global retail hierarchy
Global retail rents grew 4.2 per cent on average over the past year, but the most striking gains were concentrated among the top-tier streets where brand visibility is at a premium. While regional trends vary, the increase in the super-prime segment underscores a fundamental market reality: scarcity and location prestige are now more valuable than ever.
Table: Global rental rankings, top 10 (2025-2026)
|
Rank |
Street / Location |
City |
Rent ($/sq. ft./yr) |
YoY Change |
|
1 |
New Bond Street |
London, UK |
$2,231 |
+22% |
|
2 |
Via Montenapoleone |
Milan, Italy |
$2,179 |
0% |
|
3 |
Upper Fifth Avenue |
New York, USA |
$2,000 |
0% |
|
4 |
Tsim Sha Tsui |
Hong Kong |
$1,515 |
-6% |
|
5 |
Avenue des Champs-Élysées |
Paris, France |
$1,364 |
0% |
|
6 |
Ginza |
Tokyo, Japan |
$1,257 |
+10% |
|
7 |
Bahnhofstrasse |
Zurich, Switzerland |
$1,051 |
0% |
|
8 |
Pitt Street Mall |
Sydney, Australia |
$795 |
+4% |
|
9 |
Myeongdong |
Seoul, South Korea |
$653 |
+1% |
|
10 |
Kohlmarkt |
Vienna, Austria |
$601 |
+2% |
“Prime retail corridors are benefiting factors like resilient economic growth and a renewed appetite for discretionary spending,” notes Dominic Brown, Head of International Research at Cushman & Wakefield. “Flagship locations are no longer just shops, they are global stages for brand storytelling.”
London’s New Bond Street has reclaimed the crown as the world’s costliest retail street, with a 22 per cent year-on-year rent rise. In Asia, the picture is little different, Hong Kong’s Tsim Sha Tsui saw rents decline 6 per cent, reflecting a softening post-pandemic luxury consumption, while Tokyo’s Ginza rose 10 per cent, showing the resilience of local demand in carefully curated high streets.
Global frontiers of demand
High-quality office space continues to attract attention from MNCs. In major cities across Europe, North America, and Asia-Pacific, limited supply and strategic location are pushing rents upward while driving competition for trophy assets. Flexible work models, digital infrastructure requirements, and the consolidation of global corporate headquarters in prime cities are resulting in an unprecedented appetite for top-grade offices.
Global corporate decision-makers are increasingly targeting locations that provide both visibility and operational efficiency. Central business districts in London, New York, Tokyo, and Sydney are seeing historically low vacancy rates, emphasizing the value of premium-grade buildings as strategic assets for attracting talent and hosting multinational operations.
The high street versus mall dynamic
An important narrative emerging from the global retail market is the difference between high streets and shopping malls. While some regional markets are seeing slower growth in traditional malls, high streets continue to thrive as visible, aspirational platforms for brands. In many global capitals, Grade A retail streets report near-zero vacancies, forcing brands to compete for the scarce space available.
In cities such as London and Milan, prime streets are outperforming secondary locations, with rental growth often surpassing overall market averages. The scarcity of flagship locations means that high streets are now both a marketing statement and a revenue-generating asset, increasing their role in global retail strategy.
Outlook 2026, scarcity meets strategic expansion
Looking ahead, the premiumization trend is expected to increase. Key drivers include: continued economic stability in major markets, global brand expansion into carefully curated high streets, and the rise of digital commerce leading to demand for hybrid physical-digital presence. Trophy office spaces, data-enabled retail environments, and ultra-prime locations will remain the most sought-after assets.
The lesson for landlords, investors, and brands is clear: in 2026, quality and visibility are non-negotiable. In a market defined by scarcity and selectivity, those who secure premium space in leading global hubs will capture both commercial returns and strategic advantage.
Compliance drives India’s $176 bn textile shift

India’s textile economy is no longer selling fabric alone; it is selling proof. As compliance rules harden across export markets, particularly in European Union, the commercial logic of apparel manufacturing is being rewritten around traceability, environmental disclosure and digital authentication. For a country whose textile and apparel value chain touches more than 45 million livelihoods, that shift has triggered a sweeping strategic reset.
With the Union Budget 2026-27 earmarking Rs 1,500 crore for integrated sector upgrades, policymakers are steering the $176 billion industry away from the old playbook of scale-at-any-cost toward something more defensible: high-value fibres, digitally verified sourcing and centralized manufacturing ecosystems that can withstand regulatory scrutiny. The catalyst is the EU’s Digital Product Passport regime, which now effectively demands “dirt-to-shirt” visibility for goods entering the bloc. Without verifiable provenance, consignments risk exclusion. What is emerging is not incremental reform but an architectural redesign of India’s textile supply chain.
Compliance becomes the new cost of market entry
Until recently, traceability was a sustainability talking point. In 2026, it has become a tariff by another name. European buyers increasingly insist on machine-readable documentation that tracks everything from farm inputs and water consumption to chemical processing and labour conditions. For exporters, this means the difference between seamless customs clearance and rejected containers. Industry executives describe the Digital Product Passport as less of a regulation and more of a gatekeeper to a $65 billion EU-UK apparel corridor.
India’s answer has been to embed verification into the fibre itself. Blockchain registries, QR-coded bales and standardized digital procurement are turning raw materials into data assets. The country is positioning itself not just as a low-cost producer but as a trusted, transparent supplier in an era when opacity carries commercial penalties.
Rewriting the fibre story
At the farm level, the government’s strategy has coalesced around the National Fibre Mission, which aims to rebalance India’s heavy cotton dependence and modernize productivity. While cotton still anchors the ecosystem, the goal is to upgrade quality and branding rather than simply push volumes.
The flagship initiative under this umbrella, Kasturi Cotton Bharat, illustrates how policy is merging with technology. What began as a certification badge has evolved into a structured, digitally monitored supply network designed to meet international disclosure norms.
The impact estimates for 2025-26 show how the program is being executed on the ground. Model villages are being rolled out across three to five sites in each cotton district, creating controlled clusters where best practices can be enforced. Traceability is anchored in a blockchain-backed BITS system that assigns QR codes to every bale, allowing buyers to scan and retrieve origin data instantly. Farmer support comes through trained Mitras who feed agronomic information into the system in real time. At the commercial end, the emphasis is on increasing Extra-Long Staple output, which commands premium prices in luxury and performance segments.
Table: Kasturi Cotton Bharat impact (2025-26 estimates)
|
Metric |
Performance data |
|
Model Villages |
3-5 sites per district across the cotton belt |
|
Traceability Method |
Blockchain-based QR-coded bales (BITS system) |
|
Farmer Support |
Kasturi Cotton Mitras providing real-time agronomic data |
|
Market Goal |
Increase ELS (Extra-Long Staple) production for luxury segments |
Taken together, the table’s metrics reveal a deliberate shift from commodity cotton to a branded, trackable raw material. Digital tools such as Kapas Kisan for slot booking and CotBiz for e-invoicing have already brought full procurement transparency under MSP operations, ensuring both price stability for farmers and quality assurance for mills. In effect, the farm has become the first node in a verified supply chain rather than an anonymous supplier.
Waste-to-wealth moves to centre stage
While cotton gets smarter, alternative fibres are getting bigger. India’s cellulose fibre market, valued at $1.2 billion in 2025, is projected to nearly double by 2034. The growth is being driven by global demand for biodegradable and low-impact textiles, a category where India’s agricultural residue offers a competitive edge.
Nowhere is this clearer than in the banana fibre story. In knitwear hub Tirupur and heritage textile centre Bhagalpur, manufacturers have converted what was once farm waste into a commercially viable input. Automated decortication has stabilized supply and raised fibre yields from 50 to 70 per cent, while reducing labour intensity by roughly 80 per cent.
The economics are beginning to look compelling. More than half of processed banana fibre is already being diverted into high-performance composites, with nearly half feeding the home textiles segment. Exporters report that 60/40 banana–organic cotton blends are fetching premiums of up to 25 per cent in US and French markets, signalling that sustainability attributes are translating into pricing power.
The agrarian logic is equally persuasive. Because banana plants fruit only once, monetizing the pseudostem offers farmers incremental income without additional water or land use. For brands under pressure to cut resource footprints, the fibre offers a ready-made compliance narrative.
Building parks as proof engines
If fibre-level traceability forms the foundation, infrastructure is becoming the enforcement mechanism. The rollout of seven PM MITRA mega textile parks is creating consolidated, plug-and-play ecosystems that house spinning, weaving, processing and garmenting within a single geography. With planned investments exceeding Rs 70,000 crore, these parks are as much about data integrity as industrial capacity.
Centralization simplifies oversight. When the entire value chain sits inside an ESG-monitored zone, it becomes far easier to generate the documentation required for digital passports. Energy use, effluent treatment and labour audits can be captured at source rather than reconstructed later. For international buyers, that translates into lower compliance risk.
Simultaneously, blockchain-based traceability platforms are proliferating, already accounting for a large share of the Digital Product Passport technology market. These systems create immutable ledgers covering material origins, chemical usage and social audits, effectively converting every garment into a scannable compliance record. For exporters, the message is stark: if a QR code cannot verify your footprint, you are not in the game.
From volume supplier to trusted partner
India’s textile sector has long been described as a manufacturing powerhouse, contributing over 8 per cent to merchandise exports and spanning everything from raw cotton to technical textiles. But the next phase of growth appears less about adding capacity and more about upgrading credibility.
With a Vision 2030 target of $350 billion in output, the focus has shifted to modernizing MSME clusters, strengthening man-made fibre capabilities and aligning with global value chains through new trade agreements. A ₹10,000 crore SME Growth Fund is accelerating this transition, helping smaller players adopt digital systems and sustainable processes that were once the preserve of large mills.
The broader strategy is becoming clear. By combining traceable natural fibres, waste-to-wealth innovation and integrated mega-parks, India is positioning itself as a compliance-ready sourcing base at a time when transparency is the ultimate differentiator. In the coming decade, the winners in global textiles may not be those who produce the most fabric, but those who can prove exactly where every thread came from. India is betting that in a traceability-first world, proof will be its strongest export.
Lenzing scales circular denim infrastructure via new fiber launch
The debut of Tencel Lyocell - HV100 at Intertextile Shanghai marks a critical advancement in the technical capabilities of regenerated cellulose fibers within the global denim market.
Designed specifically to maintain high tenacity and low shrinkage, HV100 addresses the historical performance gap between sustainable alternatives and conventional cotton. By integrating this fiber into high-volume manufacturing lines, Lenzing is enabling mills to produce high-performance denim that retains its aesthetic and structural properties through rigorous industrial laundering. This development arrives as the global denim market, valued at $72 billion in 2025, faces mounting regulatory pressure from the EU’s Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR), necessitating a shift toward standardized, low-impact raw materials that do not compromise garment longevity.
Strategic mill collaborations and Asian market expansion
Lenzing’s expansion strategy centers on deep-tier partnerships with leading Chinese textile mills, positioning HV100 as the primary feedstock for premium denim exports. The integration of HV100 into our spinning processes allows for a 20 per cent increase in fiber efficiency compared to previous lyocell generations, noted Marcus Adeler, Regional Textile Consultant.
By securing off-take agreements with major regional players, Lenzing is capitalizing on the 6 per cent projected growth in China’s domestic premium apparel segment. A recent case study with a Tier-I Zhejiang mill demonstrated that blending HV100 with recycled cotton reduces the carbon footprint of a standard pair of jeans by approximately 35 per cent without requiring specialized machinery upgrades. This plug-and-play compatibility offers a lucrative opportunity for retailers to meet Scope 3 emissions targets while maintaining price competitiveness in a volatile retail environment.
Lenzing Group specializes in premium wood-based cellulose fibers, serving the global textile and nonwoven industries. Operating across Europe and Asia, the company focuses on high-margin lyocell and modal production. Recent fiscal reports indicate a stabilized recovery with targeted investments in carbon-neutral technologies to achieve net-zero status by 2050, building on its 85-year manufacturing heritage.









