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Arvind Limited has accelerated its international diversification strategy with the formal incorporation of Arvind Atelier (FZC) in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates. Established on April 20, 2026, this new subsidiary serves as a dedicated vehicle for the trading of ready-made garments and various textile products.

By securing an 80 per cent equity stake in the entity, the Ahmedabad-based conglomerate aims to capitalize on the UAE’s robust logistical infrastructure and its status as a primary commercial gateway to markets across Europe, Africa, and the Middle East. This move aligns with broader industry trends, as Indian textile exports to the UAE increased by 22.3 per cent in FY25-26, highlighting the region's increasing importance as a demand center.

Leveraging regulatory incentives and operational efficiency

The selection of the Sharjah Airport International Free Zone (SAIF Zone) provides Arvind with significant fiscal advantages, including 100 per cent foreign ownership and optimized tax frameworks. This structural decision is intended to mitigate the ‘triple squeeze’ of rising raw material costs, freight volatility, and tariff pressures that have recently impacted the sector's margins. In Q3, FY26, Arvind reported a consolidated revenue of Rs 2,372.64 crore, maintaining volume growth despite external cost headwinds. The UAE hub is expected to streamline the company's international supply chain, allowing for more agile distribution of its high-value woven fabrics and garments to global retail partners.

Leadership transition and long-term market integration

This expansion coincides with a pivotal leadership transition, as Punit Lalbhai assumed an executive role leading the textiles and apparel business on April 15, 2026. The new subsidiary represents a tangible step in the ‘Renovision’ philosophy - a strategy focused on shifting from domestic reliance to global dominance. As India concludes major trade agreements, including the recent FTA with the European Union in January 2026, Arvind's presence in the UAE positions it to better navigate preferential market access. By integrating a dedicated trading arm within a global logistics node, the company seeks to sustain its garmenting division's momentum, which recently achieved a record quarterly output of 10.7 million pieces.

Integrated textile excellence

Arvind Limited is a premier global textile-to-retail conglomerate specializing in denim, woven fabrics, and advanced materials. Managing a diverse portfolio from fiber to fashion, the company exports to over 120 destinations. With a focus on sustainable innovation and a 16.1 per cent ROCE, Arvind continues to lead India's high-value apparel manufacturing sector.

  

The New Rules of Resale EPR turning secondhand into fashions strategic growth engine

 

The global fashion industry is facing a decisive regulatory and commercial reset. What began as a sustainability narrative around reuse and recycling is now evolving into a hard-edged business imperative, driven by the rise of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR). Across major markets, particularly in Europe, policymakers are shifting accountability for textile waste from municipalities to producers, forcing brands to take ownership of the entire product lifecycle, from design and sale to post-consumer collection, sorting, reuse, and recycling.

For the secondhand apparel economy, this marks a inflection point. No longer positioned as a fringe sustainability channel, resale is emerging as a central infrastructure layer in the circular fashion value chain. The result is a reordering of how value is created, captured, and regulated in the global textile ecosystem.

The waste-recovery disconnect

The regulatory urgency behind EPR is rooted in the growing mismatch between textile production and recovery capacity. The EU now generates over 12 million tonnes of textile waste annually, yet less than 1 per cent of discarded textiles are recycled back into new garments. This imbalance has exposed the limits of the industry’s legacy linear model and accelerated the push toward enforceable accountability.

The implications for fashion businesses are big. As waste volumes rise and landfill restrictions tighten, secondhand and reuse channels are becoming the most immediately scalable route for diverting textiles from disposal. In commercial terms, this transforms resale from a brand extension strategy into a compliance-linked revenue stream.

Policies move from theory to enforcement

The new generation of EPR frameworks is distinguished by operational specificity. Mandatory separate textile collection across EU member states, which came into force in January 2025, has already begun to funnel substantially larger volumes of post-consumer garments into formal recovery systems.

This supply-side increase is being reinforced by eco-modulated fee structures, where producers pay differentiated contributions based on durability, recyclability, and material complexity. The financial logic is clear: garments designed for longevity and easy recovery become cheaper to manage, while low-durability fast-fashion products attract higher compliance costs.

The regulatory model is also beginning to influence upstream product development. Eco-design requirements are nudging brands toward mono-material constructions, repair-friendly formats, and longer-use garments. Meanwhile, the expected rollout of Digital Product Passports from 2026 introduces a new data layer that could materially improve fiber-level traceability and downstream sorting efficiency.

The supply boom comes with margin complexity

The most immediate impact on the secondhand market is an increase in feedstock volumes. However, market participants are finding that higher supply does not automatically translate into stronger profits.

Feature Business impact Volume A sharp rise in post-consumer textile inflows is expanding resale inventories. Durability A growing share of lower-quality fast-fashion garments is reducing average resale yield. Composition Complex fiber blends are making recovery and grading more expensive. Sorting Labour and technology intensity in sorting operations has increased significantly.

This table captures the paradox now facing secondhand operators: more garments are entering the system, but a larger proportion consists of low-durability, mixed-fiber products that carry weaker resale economics. In effect, EPR is improving access to supply while simultaneously exposing the quality deficits created by the fast-fashion era. For business operators, this means margin protection increasingly depends on superior grading intelligence, material recognition, and inventory discipline rather than simple scale.

Professionalisation of resale infrastructure

As compliance expectations rise, the secondhand sector is undergoing rapid professionalisation. What was once a fragmented ecosystem of thrift channels and opportunistic recommerce players is evolving into a more industrialised service layer for brands. Higher standards in traceability, waste reporting, and product-level transparency are driving investment into advanced grading methodologies, AI-assisted sorting systems, and data-led inventory engines. Automated fiber identification and robotics are becoming critical in processing higher textile volumes without proportionately increasing labour costs.

This technological shift is particularly important because reuse remains the most commercially viable circular pathway in the near term. While textile-to-textile recycling technologies continue to mature, resale and recommerce offer immediate value recovery with lower capital intensity.

The roadmap to 2028

The regulatory transition is unfolding through a phased timeline that gives brands and operators a narrowing window to build capability.

Timeline

Milestone

2022-24

EU Strategy for Sustainable and Circular Textiles introduced; Ecodesign framework approved.

January 2025

Mandatory separate textile collection implemented across the EU.

2026

Initial implementation of Digital Product Passports and expanded ecodesign requirements.

2027-28

Full implementation of harmonized EPR schemes across EU Member States.

The progression outlined in the table highlights why the next two years are critical. By 2026, traceability and design compliance will begin intersecting with resale infrastructure, while the 2027–2028 phase is likely to cement harmonised reporting, fee, and recovery obligations. For global apparel brands, waiting until full enforcement may prove commercially expensive.

Where the new value pools are emerging

The strongest opportunity lies in collaboration between brands, secondhand operators, and technology providers. Brand-controlled resale channels are rapidly gaining momentum as labels seek to retain ownership over product journeys, customer relationships, and EPR reporting outcomes. Proprietary resale storefronts, white-label recommerce partnerships, and embedded take-back ecosystems are all becoming strategic tools for compliance and customer retention.

At the same time, secondhand specialists are moving deeper into the enterprise services stack. Reverse logistics, sorting, grading, and take-back program management are increasingly becoming B2B revenue streams tied directly to brands’ regulatory obligations. This creates a new value pool where secondhand operators are no longer just merchants of used goods, but infrastructure partners in compliance-led circularity.

Compliance as competitive advantage

Extended Producer Responsibility is no longer a future-facing sustainability concept; it is fast becoming the operating system for fashion’s next phase of growth. For the secondhand apparel market, the shift introduces tighter standards, rising cost pressures, and a more formalised performance environment. Yet within this disruption lies an advantage. Businesses that invest early in traceability, AI-enabled sorting, reverse logistics, and transparent reporting can convert compliance from a cost centre into a moat. In that sense, EPR is doing more than rewriting the rules of the secondhand market, it is redefining who captures value in fashion’s circular economy.

  

Led by Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi, the Odisha Cabinet has formally approved a Rs 124 crore investment for a modern spinning unit in Balangir district. Spearheaded by Shree Ambica Cotspin, this facility represents a critical shift in the state’s industrial policy to retain value within its borders. Despite a steady increase in regional cotton cultivation, Odisha has historically functioned as a raw material exporter, shipping high-grade cotton to spinning hubs in Tamil Nadu and Gujarat for processing. This new project aims to reverse that trend by establishing downstream processing infrastructure directly within the Kalahandi-Balangir-Koraput (KBK) region.

Integration of Industry 4.0 and regional supply chain resilience

Equipped with advanced spinning technology, the unit is designed to produce high-tenacity yarn for both domestic industrial markets and local handloom clusters. Beyond the immediate creation of 300 direct jobs, the facility acts as a catalyst for a proposed textile cluster in Western Odisha. Industry experts anticipate, localized yarn production will reduce logistics overheads for regional weavers by approximately 15–20 per cent. This project is the cornerstone of our 'farm-to-fabric' mission, notes Anu Garg, Chief Secretary. By aligning with India’s broader technical textile aspirations, the plant is expected to integrate IoT-enabled quality monitoring to meet international standards, facilitating direct export opportunities from the state's emerging manufacturing base.

Regional manufacturing specialization: Shree Ambica Cotspin

An Odisha-based enterprise with over 27 years of experience in the textile value chain, Shree Ambica Cotspin focuses on cotton ginning and yarn manufacturing, primarily serving the Eastern Indian market. Under its current expansion roadmap, the firm aims to leverage state incentives to modernize its spinning capacities and achieve vertical integration, significantly improving the financial returns for local cotton growers through direct procurement.

  

In a decisive move for the Australian performance apparel sector, Gold Coast-based activewear brand LSKD has formalized a ten-year strategic partnership with environmental technology firm Samsara Eco. Announced in April 2026, the deal centers on the integration of ‘infinite’ recycled nylon into LSKD’s core collections. Unlike traditional mechanical recycling, which degrades fiber quality over time, Samsara Eco’s proprietary enzymatic technology breaks down complex plastic waste into its original molecular building blocks. This process allows LSKD to produce high-compression leggings and high-intensity training gear that maintain the exact tensile strength and ‘second-skin’ handfeel of virgin nylon while significantly reducing carbon intensity.

Strategic market positioning and the 1 per cent sustainability mandate

The partnership arrives as the Australian activewear market is projected to reach a valuation of $13.2 billion by 2034, with nearly 41 per cent of consumers actively seeking eco-conscious fabric alternatives. For LSKD, which has seen explosive growth - transitioning from a $1.6 million business in 2019 to a global direct-to-consumer powerhouse - this long-term offtake agreement ensures supply chain resilience against the rising cost of sustainable raw materials. By locking in a decade of recycled feedstock, LSKD is positioning itself as a technical leader in the circular economy. Our mission is to be 1 per cent better every day, noted Jason Daniel, Founder, emphasizing, this collaboration moves the brand beyond seasonal ‘capsule’ drops toward a fully integrated, circular manufacturing model for its 200,000 global customers.

Founded in 2007, LSKD is an Australian-owned functional sportswear brand specializing in training, running, and adventure apparel. With a primary focus on the US and Australian markets, the company has achieved rapid scale through a wholly direct-to-consumer model. LSKD is currently expanding its global retail footprint while targeting 100 per cent sustainable fiber integration by 2030.

  

In a high-stakes development for global apparel retail, the Dutch office of the Clean Clothes Campaign (CCC) filed a formal lawsuit against Levi Strauss & Co on April 21, 2026. The legal action, supported by research from the Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations (SOMO), alleges, the denim giant employed misleading marketing to convince Dutch consumers of superior labor conditions within its supply chain. This case marks a critical shift from activist pressure to judicial enforcement, as four individual consumers have joined the suit, claiming they purchased products under the false impression of ethical production.

The Turkish catalyst and the ‘Social Washing’ challenge

Central to the litigation is a 2024 industrial dispute at a Turkish supplier producing exclusively for Levi’s. According to reports from the Worker Rights Consortium, over 400 workers were allegedly met with violence and terminated after protesting for better conditions and trade union rights. The lawsuit argues, Levi’s continued to market its adherence to international labor standards while failing to remedy these specific, documented violations. Although Levi’s reportedly removed several sustainability statements from its digital platforms in March 2026 following a demand letter, the CCC contends. prior ‘social washing’ significantly influenced consumer behavior. This litigation serves as a cautionary benchmark for the textile industry, signaling that corporate ESG narratives must now be supported by verifiable, on-ground labor compliance to avoid legal liability.

Global denim and supply chain governance

Founded in 1853, Levi Strauss & Co is a global leader in denim apparel, operating across 110 countries. While the company recently signed the International Accord for Health and Safety for its Pakistan operations in late 2024, it continues to face scrutiny over its broader labor monitoring. Its current strategy focuses on direct-to-consumer scaling while managing the legal and reputational risks associated with evolving European consumer protection laws regarding supply chain transparency.

  

In a landmark development for the man-made cellulosic fiber (MMCF) sector, Swedish textile recycler formerly known as Renewcell - Circulose has entered a strategic commercial agreement with China Textile Academy Green Fibre (CTA). This partnership, announced in April 2026, aims to bridge the long-standing gap between experimental recycled content and industrial-scale lyocell production. While recycled feedstock has historically integrated more easily into viscose processes, lyocell’s sensitive solvent-based spinning environment requires higher pulp purity and consistent performance. By successfully validating ‘Circulose’ pulp on CTA’s commercial lines, the collaboration confirms, textile-to-textile circularity is now technically viable for high-performance, non-fibrillating lyocell grades.

Strategic offtake and the 2027 capacity roadmap

The agreement moves beyond technical testing to provide the market with much-needed supply-chain predictability. CTA has committed to multi-year offtake volumes of Circulose pulp, a move that stabilizes the primary recycler's revenue stream as it restarts its Ortviken plant in late 2026. While commercial availability remains restricted to select early-adopter brands through the remainder of this year, the partners have outlined a robust scaling phase for 2027. This phased rollout is designed to mitigate the ‘feedstock gap’ that has previously hindered the circular economy. CTA’s ability to produce lyocell from Circulose is a testament to the performance of our pulp, states Jonatan Janmark, CEO, Circulose. The move offers a data-backed pathway for global retailers to meet 2030 recycled content mandates without compromising the strength or tactile quality of premium apparel.

Next-generation fiber collaboration

Owned by private equity firm Altor, Circulose operates the world’s first commercial-scale chemical textile recycling plant in Sweden, converting cotton waste into high-grade dissolving pulp. China Textile Academy (CTA) Green Fiber is a leading industrial research platform specializing in advanced lyocell technology. Together, they target the premium performance apparel and sustainable fashion markets, with plans to expand global recycled lyocell capacity by 2027.

  

Asia Pacific Rayon (APR) has intensified its cross-border retail strategy, utilizing high-profile industry exhibitions to formalize partnerships within the Manmade Cellulosic Fiber (MMCF) sector. By centering operations on the Indonesia-India corridor, APR is positioning itself at the heart of a market projected to reach $50.28 billion globally by 2026. This geographical focus leverages India’s status as a premier manufacturing hub - where the rayon segment alone is valued at $1.8 billion this year - to absorb high-tenacity viscose and lyocell production.

Strategic innovation in material science

A key development in APR’s recent showcases is the introduction of ‘Nature Performance’ bio-based fibers, designed to meet the rigorous demands of the performance apparel segment. In 2026, apparel accounts for approximately 32.7 per cent of the total rayon market, driven by a consumer shift toward breathable, moisture-wicking textiles. To maintain competitive parity against synthetic alternatives, APR is deploying closed-loop manufacturing protocols that recover up to 95 per cent of chemicals. Tushar Ved, Regional Retail Analyst, notes, ‘technical integration across the supply chain is no longer optional but a prerequisite for securing long-term brand contracts in a sustainability-conscious landscape.’

Scaling sustainable capacity and market share

The primary challenge remains the volatility of raw material costs, which impacts nearly 28 per cent of global manufacturers. However, APR’s integrated ‘plantation-to-fashion’ model provides a significant buffer, ensuring price stability for regional partners. With a production capacity exceeding 300,000 tons annually, the group is transitioning toward a 100 per cent bio-based portfolio to align with EU and Asian environmental mandates. This systemic expansion into Tier II Indian cities and Indonesian batik sectors ensures that APR remains the dominant supplier for the next generation of circular fashion.

As Asia’s leading integrated viscose rayon producer, APR operates a state-of-the-art facility in Pangkalan Kerinci, Indonesia. The company specializes in high-quality, biodegradable fibers for the global apparel and home textile markets. Under its APR2030 vision, the group is expanding production capacity while targeting net-zero emissions, leveraging its 2019 founding heritage to lead the regional shift toward sustainable, forest-based materials.

  

As India enters the FY26-27, the textile and apparel sector faces a critical juncture characterized by an inverted duty structure. Industry leaders, including the Southern India Mills Association (SIMA) and the Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI), have intensified pressure on the government to permanently abolish the 11 per cent import duty on raw cotton. Comprising a 5 per cent Basic Customs Duty and a 5 per cent Agriculture Infrastructure and Development Cess, this levy has rendered domestic cotton prices 10 per cent to 12 per cent higher than international benchmarks. Consequently, Indian manufacturers are struggling to fulfill high-value export orders for the US and EU, as regional competitors like Vietnam and Bangladesh leverage zero-duty regimes to secure market share.

Strategic shift towards value-added segments

Despite these operational headwinds, the industry demonstrates remarkable resilience. Official data for FY 2025-26 reveals a 2.1 per cent growth in total textile exports, reaching Rs 3.16 lakh crore. The Ready-Made Garment (RMG) segment remains the primary engine of this growth, contributing Rs 1.39 lakh crore, a 2.9 per cent Y-o-Y increase. However, the stagnation in cotton yarn and fabric exports - which grew by a mere 0.4 per cent - highlights the urgent need for raw material neutrality. To mitigate the volatility of cotton, many large-scale spinning units are diversifying into man-made fibers (MMF), which saw a more robust growth of 3.6 per cent, signaling a structural shift toward technical textiles and synthetic blends.

Bridging the quality gap for global logistics

The demand for duty-free access is primarily driven by a deficit in Extra-Long Staple (ELS) cotton, essential for premium garment production. Analysts suggest, removing the 11 per cent duty is vital for achieving the Ministry of Textiles' $100 billion export target by 2030. While the recent reduction in U.S. tariffs to 18 per cent offers a competitive edge over neighbors, high domestic input costs threaten to erode these gains. A permanent waiver would stabilize internal yarn pricing and allow Indian mills to function as global manufacturing hubs, integrating more effectively with newly signed Free Trade Agreements with the UK and the EU.

The Indian textile industry is a dominant global player in cotton spinning and ready-made garments, serving major retailers across North America and Europe. Currently, the sector is transitioning toward high-growth technical textiles and sustainable MMF blends. With a 2.1 per cent export growth in FY26, the industry aims for $100 billion in annual exports by 2030 through infrastructure modernization and trade liberalization.

  

The 2027 Mandate Why denims future hinges on verifiable data

 

For decades, the global denim industry has relied on a narrative of durability, heritage, and authenticity. That narrative is now being stress-tested by a new operational reality: data integrity. As per Nicolas Prophte, Founder of the Denim Deal Foundation and former supply chain executive across global apparel brands, the sector’s core vulnerability is no longer production efficiency or sourcing, it is the credibility of its data.

The issue is not the absence of information, but its fragmentation and unverifiability. Much of the industry continues to operate on approximations, supplier-declared metrics, and non-standardized disclosures. This model is increasingly incompatible with an emerging regulatory environment that demands precision, auditability, and machine readability. What is unfolding is not a gradual evolution, but a reset, one that will redefine how denim products are designed, documented, and distributed globally.

The digital product passport as an operating system

At the center of this change is the Digital Product Passport (DPP), a foundational requirement under the European Union’s Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR). Contrary to early perceptions, the DPP is not a consumer-facing storytelling tool. It is, in effect, a technical infrastructure layer, a digital ledger that assigns each product a verifiable data identity.

This product identity captures what can be described as the material and environmental DNA of a garment. It transforms every pair of jeans into a data asset, embedding traceability, impact metrics, and circularity instructions into a standardized, machine-readable format. The implications are that compliance will no longer be achieved through broad sustainability claims or brand-level disclosures. Instead, validation will occur at the unit level, where each product must independently demonstrate its credentials through auditable data.

What compliance actually requires

The shift toward DPP compliance forces brands to re-architect their data collection frameworks across the value chain. The table below outlines the core data architecture required for denim products to meet 2027 standards.

Data Category

Requirements

Material DNA

Precise fiber composition and audited post-consumer recycled (PCR) content.

Geographic Traceability

Country-of-origin info for every tier—from the cotton field to the laundry.

Impact Metrics

Rigorous water and carbon footprint data per unit, not industry averages.

Circular Blueprint

Validated end-of-life instructions to facilitate recycling and repair.

This framework shows a decisive departure from current practices. Material composition must move beyond generic blends to exact percentages verified by third-party audits. Geographic traceability extends deep into Tier III and IV suppliers, requiring visibility into raw material origins, a level of transparency that remains largely absent today. Equally significant is the requirement for product-level impact metrics. Industry averages, long used as proxies for environmental claims, are no longer sufficient. Brands must quantify the exact footprint of each SKU, effectively linking environmental performance directly to product design and sourcing decisions.

Finally, the inclusion of a circular blueprint formalizes end-of-life responsibility. Products must be designed not just for sale, but for recovery, reuse, or recycling—embedding circularity into the data architecture itself.

From partial insight to full traceability

While awareness of DPP requirements is high across the fashion industry, execution readiness remains critically low. Current supply chain visibility is heavily skewed toward finished goods and immediate suppliers, with diminishing clarity further upstream. At the assembly level (Tier I), most brands have achieved near-complete visibility. However, this drops sharply at the fabric mill stage (Tier II), where less than half of supply chains maintain verified oversight. The most significant gap exists at the raw material level (Tier IV), where traceability is often below 15 per cent.

This disparity highlights a structural weakness: the industry’s data infrastructure was never designed for deep-tier transparency. Bridging this gap requires not incremental upgrades, but a systemic overhaul involving supplier digitization, standardized reporting protocols, and third-party verification mechanisms. The consequence of inaction is not merely operational inefficiency, it is regulatory exposure.

Compliance economics

The financial implications of DPP adoption are often framed in terms of compliance cost. However, a closer analysis shows, the cost of inaction can outweigh the investment required for compliance. Regulatory scrutiny around environmental claims has intensified sharply in recent years, with penalties for misleading or unsubstantiated sustainability messaging rising across major markets. The increase in enforcement signals a shift from voluntary disclosure to legal accountability. In this context, the DPP functions as a risk mitigation tool. It provides a defensible, auditable record that protects brands against allegations of greenwashing. More importantly, it establishes a foundation for new value creation. Verified transparency can unlock tangible commercial benefits, including improved consumer trust, preferential treatment under Extended Producer Responsibility frameworks, and higher access to sustainability-linked financing. In effect, data integrity is transitioning from a compliance requirement to a competitive differentiator.

From green claims to quantified proof

The risks of inadequate data infrastructure are already materializing. A recent case involving a European fast-fashion retailer—penalized for relying on volume-balanced sustainability certificates rather than physical traceability—illustrates the limitations of legacy verification models.

The incident highlights a shift: intent is no longer sufficient. Without granular, product-level data, even well-meaning sustainability initiatives can fail regulatory scrutiny. The transition to DPP frameworks effectively eliminates ambiguity, replacing narrative-driven claims with quantifiable, verifiable proof. This evolution marks the end of what can be described as soft sustainability, where broad commitments and aggregated metrics dominated communication strategies.

Reframing transparency as a growth strategy

As the 2027 deadline approaches, the denim industry is bifurcating into two camps. One views DPP compliance as a regulatory obligation, a minimum threshold to be met with efficiency. The other recognizes it as an opportunity to redefine brand positioning through radical transparency.

The distinction is consequential. Brands that invest early in strong data systems can use transparency as a trust-building mechanism, transforming compliance into a consumer-facing advantage. In a market increasingly shaped by informed purchasing decisions, verified data becomes a powerful differentiator. Moreover, transparency enables operational optimization. Access to granular supply chain data allows brands to identify inefficiencies, reduce resource consumption, and improve product design, delivering both environmental and financial returns.

Building the infrastructure ahead of regulation

While the regulatory deadline is set for 2027, early adopters are already operationalizing DPP-aligned systems. Industry collaborations, such as those between denim-focused organizations and lifecycle assessment platforms, are creating standardized methodologies for impact measurement. These initiatives aim to convert subjective sustainability narratives into objective datasets. By integrating audited lifecycle assessments into product development processes, brands can ensure that every environmental claim is backed by verifiable evidence. This proactive approach not only de-risks future compliance but also positions participating companies at the forefront of a data-driven transformation.

The end of supply chain opacity

Historically, opacity within the supply chain was considered a competitive safeguard. Brands often withheld supplier information to protect sourcing advantages. That paradigm is rapidly dissolving. In an interconnected global manufacturing ecosystem, supplier overlap is common. Competitive differentiation is shifting away from who produces the product to how the product is conceptualized, documented, and communicated.

Transparency, once perceived as a risk, is becoming a prerequisite. The supply chain’s role is evolving from a hidden operational backbone to a visible, data-driven enabler of brand value.

The denim industry’s transition toward data integrity is more than regulatory compliance, it signals a redefinition of authenticity itself. In a sector built on the symbolism of rugged, honest materials, authenticity is being reworked through the lens of verifiable information. As 2027 approaches, the message for brands is unambiguous. The ability to produce high-quality denim will no longer be sufficient. Success will depend on the ability to prove it quantitatively, transparently, and at scale. The era of approximation is ending. In its place, a new standard is emerging one where data is not just supportive, but foundational to the product itself.

  

Europes textile core unravels as costs imports and policy pressure bite

 

Europe’s textile and apparel sector, long seen as a benchmark for craftsmanship and industrial depth, is slipping into a prolonged slowdown. The latest EURATEX data signals a third consecutive year of decline, with industry leaders warning of a steady erosion in global competitiveness. The numbers still project scale and relevance. The sector generates over €166 billion in turnover and supports roughly 1.2 million jobs across 200,000 companies. Yet beneath that scale, the fundamentals are weakening, with production, turnover and employment all trending downward in tandem.

Table: The numbers unveil the truth

Indicators (2025 forecast)

Textile sector change

Clothing sector change

Production

-1.80%

-4.50%

Turnover

-2.00%

-1.80%

Employment

-4.80%

-1.80%

Note: Data derived from EURATEX Economic Update 2026/Key Indicators Chart

The data reflects a broad-based narrowing but the difference between textiles and clothing is telling. Apparel manufacturing is taking a sharper production hit, with a projected 4.5 per cent decline in 2025 following an even steeper fall the previous year. This signals not just cyclical weakness but a relocation of fashion manufacturing away from Europe. Textiles, meanwhile, show deeper stress on employment, suggesting that upstream manufacturing, often more energy-intensive is bearing the brunt of cost pressures. The simultaneous decline in turnover confirms that demand recovery has not kept pace with rising input costs, reducing margins across the value chain.

Apparel takes the hardest blow

The clothing segment has emerged as the weakest link in the ecosystem. After a near 7 per cent drop in production in 2024, the continued slide into 2025 underscores a sustained loss of manufacturing relevance. This is less about demand disappearing and more about demand being fulfilled elsewhere. European brands continue to sell, but production is increasingly offshored, particularly to Asia, where cost structures remain lower. A perfect storm builds

At the heart of the downturn lies the simultaneous pressures that are proving difficult to offset. The rise of large-scale digital marketplaces has intensified price competition, with low-cost imports entering Europe at volumes domestic manufacturers struggle to match. These platforms operate with cost advantages that European producers, bound by stricter labour and environmental standards cannot replicate without sacrificing margins.

Energy costs have emerged as another decisive factor. Textile production, especially in upstream processes like spinning and weaving, is energy-intensive. Persistently high power costs across Europe have widened the gap with competing manufacturing hubs, making locally produced fabrics less competitive even before they reach garment factories.

Overlaying this is increasing regulatory framework. While Europe’s push toward sustainability and circularity is globally influential, the compliance burden is disproportionately heavy on small and mid-sized firms. For many SMEs, agility is being replaced by administrative strain, limiting their ability to respond to market shifts. Demand-side weakness compounds the problem. A cooling global economy has reduced consumption, leaving brands with excess inventory and lower appetite for higher-cost European sourcing.

Ripples across manufacturing ecosystem

What’s more the implications extend well beyond apparel retail. Europe’s textile base underpins multiple industrial ecosystems, from healthcare to mobility.

Technical textiles are critical in sectors such as protective equipment, automotive manufacturing and construction. The decline in domestic capacity raises questions about autonomy, particularly at a time when supply chain resilience has become a policy priority.

Equally significant is the impact on Europe’s circular economy ambitions. Localised production is essential for scaling recycling, reuse and closed-loop manufacturing. As production moves offshore, the feasibility of these sustainability goals becomes more complex and potentially more carbon-intensive.

The policy clock is ticking

Industry leaders are now calling for higher policy intervention, with a clear timeline in mind. EURATEX has urged the European Commission and member states to implement tangible support measures before the end of 2026. Proposals such as an Industrial Accelerator Act and deeper energy market reforms are in discussion, but the industry’s message is that timelines may not align with business realities. Many firms, particularly smaller manufacturers, are already operating at the edge of viability.

The warning from Brussels is stark. Without rapid action to rebalance cost structures and ensure a level competitive playing field, production will continue to migrate, dependencies will deepen and Europe’s textile identity could fade. In that scenario, ‘Made in Europe’ risks becoming less a marker of industrial strength and more a legacy label of a once-dominant manufacturing base.

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