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" The global textile machinery sector is witnessing a decisive transition toward autonomous production environments to mitigate rising energy and labor overheads. At ITM 2026 in Istanbul, Karl Mayer Group introduced a sophisticated suite of digital solutions aimed at transforming traditional warp knitting into a data-driven enterprise. By integrating ‘Digital Twin’ technology and AI-based monitoring, the group is enabling manufacturers to simulate production runs before a single fiber is fed into the machine. This technical advancement addresses a critical bottleneck in the Turkish textile corridor, where operational efficiency must increase by at least 15 per cent to offset the 20 per cent rise in regional energy tariffs recorded over the last fiscal year.

Circular material handling and decarbonization mandates

Beyond pure speed, the 2026 presentation emphasizes the mechanical necessity of handling recycled yarns without compromising tensile strength. Karl Mayer’s latest machine configurations are specifically engineered for circularity, allowing for the high-speed processing of post-consumer recycled polyester and bio-based fibers. This alignment with the EU’s Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) is a strategic move for Turkish exporters, who currently direct over 40 per cent of their textile output to European retail markets. The company aims to make sustainable production the default industrial standard, ensuring our partners remain competitive in a low-carbon trade regime, stated a senior executive at the summit. By combining automation with resource-efficient warp preparation, the group is providing a vital framework for manufacturers to navigate the increasingly stringent global compliance landscape.

Engineering excellence: Karl Mayer Group

Karl Mayer is a global leader in textile machinery, specializing in warp knitting, technical textiles, and warp preparation solutions. Dominating markets in China, Turkey, and India, the firm focuses on digitalizing the textile supply chain. Following a strong 2025 performance, its 2026 roadmap prioritizes carbon-neutral manufacturing and AI-integrated industrial systems for global textile hubs.

  

In a decisive move to de-risk its revenue streams, The Lycra Company officially launched its ‘Lycra Adaptiv’ fiber for nonwovens at the Index 26 exhibition in Geneva on May 19, 2026.

This launch marks the mechanical transition of the brand’s flagship apparel technology into the global hygiene sector, a market projected to reach a valuation of $60.4 billion this year. By repurposing its proprietary polymer chemistry - originally engineered for high-performance activewear - the company is targeting the underserved demand for ‘inclusive sizing’ in disposable hygiene products. This strategic shift allows manufacturers to produce adult incontinence and baby care items that offer a wider fit window, potentially reducing SKU complexity by up to 15 per cent through more versatile, one-size-fits-more garment architectures.

Restructuring and resilience in technical textiles

The product debut coincides with a critical financial reset for the Wilmington-based firm. Following a prepackaged Chapter 11 filing in March 2026 to eliminate $1.5 billion in legacy debt, the company is utilizing Index 26 as a platform to signal its return to operational stability.

Industry data suggests, the demand for absorbent hygiene products is growing at a CAGR of 5.5 per cent, driven by aging demographics in the EU and North America. ‘Adaptiv technology responds to real bodies in motion - a demand that is now as essential in personal care as it is in fashion, states Doug Kelliher, Executive Vice President. By combining this launch with ‘Renewable Lycra,’ which features 70 per cent bio-derived content, the company is positioning itself as a technical partner for global retail groups navigating the EU’s stringent Ecodesign mandates for traceable, circular supply chains.

The Lycra Company is a global leader in fiber innovation, specializing in spandex, polyester, and performance cooling technologies. Operating across the apparel and personal care sectors, the firm holds a portfolio of premier brands including Coolmax and Thermolite. Following its 2026 debt restructuring, the company's roadmap focuses on high-margin technical textiles and sustainable material science.

  

Fiber Rebalance Why cotton is gaining ground in a volatile synthetic market

 

Into the 2026/27 season global cotton economy is entering a decisive phase. Fresh projections from the International Cotton Advisory Committee (ICAC) signal a shift: world production is expected to reach 25.9 million tonnes, surpassing estimated consumption of 25.2 million tonnes. This reversal marks the end of a multi-year cycle characterized by tighter inventories and supply-side constraints. In its place emerges a surplus-driven environment that tilts bargaining power toward buyers, particularly textile mills and apparel manufacturers facing cost volatility across the broader fiber market.

Yet, the surplus narrative is not simple. Even as supply grows, global cotton trade is projected to fall by 2.7 per cent to approximately 9.6-9.7 million tonnes. This difference reflects a deeper behavioral shift: major consuming countries are increasingly relying on domestic inventories and reworking procurement cycles in response to macroeconomic uncertainty. The result is a market that is simultaneously abundant in volume but more cautious in movement.

Yield gains vs. systemic risk

The production outlook for 2026/27 is shaped by a complex interplay of regional agricultural performance and systemic vulnerabilities. On one end of the spectrum, China continues to anchor global supply, with output holding steady at nearly 7 million tonnes. Favorable weather conditions and sustained yield improvements in major growing regions reinforce its dual dominance as both the largest producer and consumer.

In contrast, the US introduces a layer of unpredictability into the global equation. Persistent drought conditions across major cotton belts have increased the risk of crop abandonment, potentially constraining the availability of high-grade Upland cotton for export markets. This variability is particularly significant for premium yarn producers who depend on consistent fiber quality.

Compounding these challenges is geopolitical instability in the Middle East, which has disrupted fertilizer supply chains and driven up input costs. For growers worldwide, this creates a paradoxical environment: rising cultivation expenses coinciding with a surplus market that may suppress price realization. The profit of the 2026/27 harvest, therefore, hinges not just on yield, but on cost management and market timing.

Global cotton leaders, flows, dependencies

The structure of the cotton market remains highly concentrated, with a handful of countries shaping both supply and demand dynamics. The following table captures the key players and their projected roles in the 2026/27 season:

Leading countries

Role in market

Projected volume (mn MT)

Market driver

China

Top Producer/Consumer

7.0 (Production)

Favorable weather & yields

Bangladesh

Leading Importer

1.8

Massive garment export demand

Brazil

Leading Exporter

High Growth

Capturing share from US

Vietnam

Major Importer

High Growth

Increasing yarn production capacity

This distribution underscores a critical reality: the cotton economy is less about isolated national performance and more about interconnected industrial ecosystems. China’s scale with roughly 32 per cent of global consumption positions it as the central stabilizer of demand. Meanwhile, Bangladesh emerges as the single most important importer, with 1.8 million tonnes feeding its export-driven garment industry. Vietnam’s rapid capacity expansion further reinforces Asia’s dominance in spinning and textile manufacturing.

On the supply side, Brazil and Australia are capitalizing on strong harvest cycles to expand their global footprint, gradually eroding the US’ traditional export dominance. This redistribution of export power is reshaping sourcing strategies for mills that are increasingly prioritizing reliability and diversification over historical supplier relationships.

Cotton vs. synthetics, a narrowing cost divide

One of the most consequential developments for the textile value chain is the shifting competitive balance between natural and synthetic fibers. Volatility in energy markets has driven up the cost of petroleum-based inputs, directly impacting the production economics of polyester and other synthetics.

Against this backdrop, cotton is regaining relative competitiveness. The ICAC projects a price midpoint of 78 cents per pound for the upcoming season, within a range of 73 to 84 cents. This pricing band positions cotton as an increasingly viable alternative for brands seeking cost stability amid fluctuating synthetic prices. The implications extend beyond pricing. For global apparel brands, the narrowing cost gap introduces new flexibility in fiber selection, enabling a partial rebalancing toward natural fibers without significant margin erosion. This dynamic could have lasting consequences for sustainability narratives and sourcing strategies alike.

Rising stocks, changing strategies

The surplus dynamic is most visibly reflected in global inventory levels. Ending stocks are forecasted to rise by 4 per cent, reaching 17.9 million tonnes. While this buildup provides a buffer against supply shocks, it also signals a fundamental shift in procurement philosophy.

As trade volumes reduce, manufacturers are moving away from lean, just-in-time sourcing models toward more stockpiling. This is particularly evident in China, where rising domestic inventories are reshaping import behavior and reducing dependence on volatile international markets. For suppliers, this leads to new challenges. Demand becomes less frequent but more concentrated, requiring greater alignment with buyers’ long-term planning cycles rather than opportunistic spot transactions.

Bangladesh as a bellwether

Bangladesh offers a compelling case study in how leading textile economies are adapting to this new environment. Despite a contraction in global trade, its mills continue to sustain high import volumes to support one of the world’s largest garment export industries.

The strategy is in sourcing diversification. Moving beyond reliance on a single dominant supplier, Bangladeshi manufacturers are increasingly forging long-term partnerships with Brazil and Australia. This multi-origin approach reduces the risks associated with US drought-related supply fluctuations while ensuring consistent fiber quality.

The result is a more resilient supply chain, one that prioritizes continuity over cost minimization. In an era defined by uncertainty, such resilience has become a competitive advantage, enabling Bangladesh to maintain its leadership in global apparel exports.

Opportunities that open up

The 2026/27 cotton season is more than a cyclical surplus, it marks a structural inflection point in the global fiber economy. Increased supply, rising inventories, and shifting trade patterns are converging to create a rare window of stability for buyers. However, this stability is conditional. Climate risks, geopolitical disruptions, and input cost inflation continue to cast long shadows over the market. For stakeholders, success will depend on the ability to balance short-term advantages with long-term resilience. Given this scenario, cotton is no longer just a commodity it is a lever in the broader contest between natural and synthetic fibers, shaping the future of global textile manufacturing.

  

Santoni China Group is set to debut an integrated circular knitting ecosystem under the theme ‘Machines Evolved · Intelligence Delivered,’ at the ITM 2026 exhibition in Istanbul, from June 9–13. This initiative marks a definitive transition from standalone machinery to a unified production environment. By consolidating flagship brands - including Terrot, Jingmei, and Santoni (Shanghai) - into a single technological stack, the group addresses the industry's shift toward high-performance technical textiles. The showcase centers on high-precision double-knit and interlock applications, critical for the global athleisure sector, which is projected to reach $600 billion by 203Santoni China Group.

Digital intelligence and component precision

A cornerstone of the 2026 strategy is the Santoni Knitting Industrial Internet Platform (KIIP). This digital infrastructure enables real-time production monitoring and data-driven process optimization, effectively closing the gap between hardware and operational intelligence. Complementing this is the integration of SMC/Qiguan cylinder manufacturing, which combines German engineering with localized production to ensure mechanical compatibility across diverse knitting platforms. This synergy is designed to help manufacturers navigate a global circular knitting machine market expected to grow at a 3.4 per cent CAGR, reaching $2.9 billion by 2034.

Optimizing complex fabric structures

Technological highlights at the booth include the Terrot I3P 196-F BW, engineered for sophisticated double-face fabrics that integrate synthetic yarns for superior moisture management and shape retention. Additionally, the Jingmei JTB-P platform will demonstrate specialized 5-layer fabric capabilities, catering to the rising demand for technical outerwear and protective textiles. By focusing on ‘open width’ technologies and high-feeder counts, Santoni aims to reduce typical cycle times by 15–20 per cent, providing a strategic advantage as regional manufacturing hubs in Turkey and South Asia move toward high-value, sustainable production models.

A global knitting leader

Santoni China Group is a premier provider of circular and seamless knitting solutions, managing a portfolio of heritage and high-growth brands like Terrot and Jingmei. With a strong focus on R&D and digital intelligence (KIIP), the group serves international markets from athletic wear to medical textiles. Its 2026 roadmap prioritizes the deployment of intelligent manufacturing ecosystems across key textile clusters in Europe and Asia.

  

The Rajasthan State Industrial Development and Investment Corporation (RIICO) has transitioned into a new phase of industrial scaling with the inauguration of the Rupaheli Textile Park in Bhilwara.

Developed with a sanctioned capital outlay of Rs 221 crore, the park spans 209 hectare and offers 275 industrial plots. This strategic infrastructure project is designed to consolidate the entire textile value chain - from spinning and weaving to advanced garmenting - within a single high-tech ecosystem. By securing environmental clearance and initiating the 10th phase of its direct allotment scheme, RIICO is facilitating immediate entry for investors who executed MoUs during the Rising Rajasthan summit.

Incentivizing value addition under the 2025 sectoral policy

The park’s operationalization coincides with the rollout of the Rajasthan Textile and Apparel Policy 2025, which provides a robust framework for financial sustainability. Investors can leverage substantial fiscal benefits, including asset creation support for 10 years, electricity duty exemptions, and a 50 per cent reimbursement for employee training costs. The corporation aims to move beyond raw fabric production toward high-value apparel manufacturing, states a senior RIICO official. This shift is critical as the domestic technical textile market is projected to grow at a CAGR of 12.3 per cent, reaching an estimated valuation of $8.4 billion by 2025-end.

Navigating market volatility and modernization challenges

Despite Bhilwara’s established reputation as a synthetic hub, the cluster faces pressure from rising raw material costs and the global demand for sustainable fibers. To address this, the Rupaheli Park integrates green solution incentives for eco-friendly projects and state-of-the-art power infrastructure. The regional sector currently contributes significantly to India’s textile exports, which grew by 10 per cent Y-o-Y in the first half of the current fiscal. However, the success of this new hub depends on the effective execution of Rajasthan’s Rs 1,200 crore industrial upgrade plan, intended to elevate infrastructure standards across the state’s 450+ industrial areas.

Strategic textile evolution

RIICO is Rajasthan’s apex investment agency, transforming Bhilwara into a global synthetics and technical textiles leader. Managing over 450 industrial zones, it currently focuses on high-value garmenting and export-oriented units. With a planned ₹1,200 crore infrastructure upgrade for 2026-27, RIICO aims to position Rajasthan as India's premier apparel manufacturing destination.

  

As Bangladesh nears its official graduation from Least Developed Country (LDC) status in November 2026, the Intex Bangladesh 2026 exhibition, scheduled for June 18–20 at the ICCB in Dhaka, has emerged as a critical platform for industrial recalibration. The event arrives as the nation’s apparel sector - valued at over $45 billion in annual exports - transitions from high-volume manufacturing to a value-added, circular model. To maintain duty-free access to the EU market via GSP Plus, local manufacturers are seeking global partners for bio-based materials and recycled fibers, moving beyond traditional cotton toward man-made fibers (MMF) and technical textiles.

Collaborative ecosystems and chemical innovation

The 18th edition introduces the InDyChem pavilion, a specialized zone focusing on sustainable dyes and finishing solutions, organized in partnership with the Basic Chemicals, Cosmetics & Dyes Export Promotion Council (CHEMEXCIL). This initiative addresses the urgent need for zero liquid discharge (ZLD) and water stewardship across the supply chain. Over 100 Indian companies supported by councils like TEXPROCIL and the Powerloom Development & Export Promotion Council (PDEXCIL) will showcase innovations in low-impact processing. Dr. Siddhartha Rajagopal, Executive Director of TEXPROCIL, noted that the event serves as a milestone for regional integration, facilitating direct access between global fiber suppliers and over 200 LEED-certified factories in Bangladesh.

Navigating global regulatory and economic headwinds

Despite a challenging global environment marked by energy supply fluctuations and Red Sea shipping disruptions, Bangladesh maintains its position as the world’s second-largest apparel exporter. The exhibition is designed to bridge the gap between international sustainability mandates, such as the EU’s Digital Product Passport (DPP), and ground-level manufacturing capabilities. By integrating blockchain-backed traceability and AI-driven production tools, exhibitors aim to reduce typical fabric waste- currently averaging 8 per cent - down to sub-3 per cent levels. Arti Bhagat, Executive Director, Worldex India, emphasized, the 2026 focus is on empowering the region with technologies that drive global competitiveness through transparency and resource efficiency.

Global textile connector: Intex South Asia

Intex South Asia is the region's premier international textile sourcing platform, connecting over 3,000 suppliers with 70,000 global buyers since 2015. Focused on fiber, yarn, and accessories, it facilitates trade across India, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. The organizers aim to accelerate intra-regional trade, supporting Bangladesh’s push toward a $100 billion apparel export target by 2030.

  

The global textile and apparel sector is undergoing a significant structural transformation, with the market valuation projected to reach $2.36 trillion by late 2026. This trajectory is increasingly underpinned by the e-textiles and smart clothing segment, which is expected to command a $3.08 billion valuation this year. Industry data indicates, approximately 60 per cent of this specific growth stems from consumer demand for integrated health-monitoring solutions. Unlike traditional garments, these high-functionality fabrics utilize conductive fibers and flexible sensors to track biometrics, representing a move toward ‘performance-as-a-service’ in the activewear and medical sectors.

Logistics decentralization and the e-commerce imperative

Supply chain resilience has replaced lean manufacturing as the primary operational priority. With online apparel sales anticipated to represent 25 per cent of total retail by 2026-end, brands are moving away from centralized distribution. Current logistics data reveals, 86 per cent of e-commerce enterprises are actively establishing distributed fulfillment nodes to reduce last-mile delivery times. This shift is a direct response to geopolitical volatility, such as the Red Sea disruptions, which have escalated shipping lead times by up to 40 per cent. Consequently, manufacturers are diversifying production hubs into South Asia and Mexico to mitigate single-region dependency.

Circular economy mandates and regulatory compliance

Sustainability is no longer a voluntary branding exercise but a core compliance requirement. The implementation of the EU’s Green Deal and India’s Solid Waste Management Rules 2026 has introduced mandatory reporting for Scope 1 and 2 emissions. These regulations are driving the textile waste management market toward a $10.05 billion valuation. The transition to a circular model is now an economic necessity, states a senior analyst at Frost & Sullivan. Companies failing to integrate recycled feedstock or digital product passports face an estimated 5-10 per cent increase in operational overhead due to carbon penalties and regulatory friction.

Industry composition and outlook

The global textile industry provides essential materials across fashion, industrial, and medical categories. Currently, synthetic fibers maintain a 68.9 per cent market share due to their cost-efficiency in technical applications. Moving into 2027, the sector focuses on nearshoring and enzymatic recycling to maintain a steady 4.2 per cent CAGR amidst fluctuating raw material costs.

  

Turkish knit fabric leader Ekoten Tekstil has completed a definitive shift in its quality framework, transitioning from reactive manual checks to an AI-driven real-time prevention system. Following an expansive pilot, the İzmir-based manufacturer has integrated automated inspection across its high-capacity weft-knitting lines. The implementation addresses a critical industry pain point: defects often remain invisible until the resource-intensive dyeing stage. By utilizing CNN-based deep learning models with 95 per cent detection accuracy, Ekoten’s system now identifies irregularities - such as elastane lines, oil spots, and yarn inconsistencies - the moment they occur, automatically halting machines to prevent compounded fabric loss.

Operational gains and environmental ROI

Data from a year-long assessment in 2025 reveals, AI deployment prevented over 2,450 hours of defective production and avoided the creation of 32,100 kg of faulty fabric. Beyond material savings, the move optimized energy efficiency, saving approximately 289,000 kWh of electricity and reducing CO₂ emissions by over 71 tons. This technological leap has significantly increased throughput, with inspection speeds rising from a manual average of 15 m per minute to 50 m per minute. By minimizing re-dyeing and reprocessing, the system also directly conserves water - a vital metric for Ekoten’s CDP Climate Change 'A' rating.

Scaling circularity through digital traceability

The strategic value of Ekoten's AI adoption lies in its ‘Digital Roll Quality Reports’ and precise defect coordinate mapping. This level of granularity enables a ‘circular by design’ approach, where production data is integrated with machine settings to forecast maintenance needs. As Ekoten targets a 100 per cent traceability mandate for its global activewear and performance partners, the integration of AI-led inspection acts as a hedge against rising raw material costs. The industry now understands that optimizing production processes is the only way to achieve true sustainability, noted leadership, reinforcing Ekoten’s roadmap to remain a top-tier supplier in the competitive European and North American markets.

Ekoten Tekstil: A sustainable knit specialist

A subsidiary of Sun Tekstil, Ekoten Tekstil is a leading Turkish manufacturer of high-quality knitted fabrics for fashion, military, and sportswear. Operating a massive facility near İzmir with a daily capacity of 40 tonnes, it specializes in technical dyeing and digital printing. Ekoten plans to sustain its market leadership through continued $10 million+ investments in digitalization and green manufacturing.

  

Asahi Kasei has initiated a decisive restructuring of its petrochemical footprint at the Mizushima Works, specifically targeting the production of Acrylonitrile (AN) - a critical precursor for acrylic fibers and synthetic resins. By fiscal 2030, the company will decommission its 200 kt/y AN line and transition its methacrylonitrile facility to a co-production model. This move reflects a broader industrial shift toward capital efficiency, as the Material segment seeks to mitigate the volatility of primary chemical margins. While the restructuring involves businesses generating ¥116.2 billion in revenue, the corporation is maintaining its dominance in the textile value chain by leveraging its South Korean subsidiary, Tongsuh Petrochemical, to ensure uninterrupted supply to global apparel manufacturers.

Strengthening high-performance textile portfolios

The realignment extends to specialty chemical derivatives, including the discontinuation of the Mizushima polycarbonate diol (PCD) line. As fashion brands increasingly demand durable, sustainable alternatives to traditional materials, Asahi Kasei is centralizing its PCD operations—essential for high-grade synthetic leather - within its Chinese facilities. This logistical optimization allows the firm to capitalize on the $30 billion global technical textiles market, where demand for performance-driven polyurethane coatings is surging. Industry analysts suggest, by exiting low-margin domestic production, Asahi Kasei can better funnel resources into its ‘Trailblaze Together’ growth pillars, ensuring its legacy in cellulose fibers and advanced polymers evolves alongside the digital and green transitions currently redefining the global apparel landscape.

Material and healthcare synergy

Asahi Kasei is a multi-sector industrial leader focused on high-performance materials and healthcare solutions. Originally established as a cellulose fiber pioneer in 1922, the company now commands significant market share in synthetic resins and fibers across Asia and Europe. Current growth strategies prioritize the integration of sustainable chemistry and advanced electronics. Financially, the firm is focused on converting capital investments into higher margins, targeting a more robust return on equity through disciplined portfolio management and international expansion.

  

PM MITRA parks face execution test as Indias textile exports recalibrate

 

India’s textile and apparel sector closed FY 2025-26 with exports worth Rs 3,16,334.9 crore, a 2.1 per cent increase that, at first glance, appears incremental. Beneath this modest expansion lies a more consequential transition. The industry is steadily moving away from its historic dependence on raw material exports toward a value-added manufacturing model, even as global demand conditions remain uneven and input costs, particularly energy-linked synthetics continue to fluctuate.

This shift is not merely cyclical. It reflects a deliberate repositioning as India attempts to secure a higher share of global apparel trade, where margins are structurally stronger and supply chain integration increasingly determines competitiveness.

Apparel sector the growth driver

The export basket underscores this change toward value addition. Ready-Made Garments (RMG) remain the dominant growth driver, while traditional segments such as cotton textiles and handicrafts show slower momentum.

Table: India’s textile and apparel exports overview

Category

Exports FY 2025-26 (Rs cr)

YoY growth (%)

Ready-Made Garments (RMG)

1,39,349.6

2.90%

Cotton Textiles

98,420.20

1.80%

Man-Made Fibre (MMF)

42,750.50

1.20%

Handloom & Handicrafts

15,120.40

0.70%

Total Textile Exports

3,16,334.9

2.10%

The table reveals a clear hierarchy: RMG not only commands the largest share but also leads in growth. This reflects India’s gradual climb up the value chain, where finished garments increasingly outperform upstream segments. Cotton textiles, while still significant, are losing relative momentum, while MMF, despite being central to global demand remains constrained by domestic structural inefficiencies.

Geographically, diversification has become a stabilizing force. Expansion into over 120 markets has reduced reliance on traditional Western demand centers. Strong growth in the UAE and Japan highlights how trade agreements and bilateral alignments are reshaping export flows, even as elevated crude prices continue to inflate freight and synthetic input costs.

PM MITRA parks the growth boosters

At the core of India’s long-term competitiveness lies the PM Mega Integrated Textile Region and Apparel (PM MITRA) scheme. With a Ra 4,445 crore outlay, the initiative aims to compress the entire textile value chain from spinning to garmenting into integrated industrial ecosystems.

The implementation status across the seven approved parks, however, reveals a mixed picture of early success and execution strain. The leading cluster of parks has moved decisively into operational territory. Dhar in Madhya Pradesh has emerged as the frontrunner, with over 1,130 acres allotted and an investment pipeline exceeding Rs 21,000 crore. Tamil Nadu’s Virudhnagar park demonstrates the advantages of logistics-led planning, attracting over Rs 2,000 crore in committed capital. Telangana’s Warangal site, leveraging an existing textile base, has also secured significant early-stage investments.

In contrast, a second tier of parks, Amravati, Navsari, and Lucknow remains in the infrastructure build-out phase. These projects are heavily dependent on external connectivity investments, with funds drawn from a Rs 2,160 crore infrastructure pool to ensure last-mile access. Karnataka’s Kalaburagi park, despite completing land acquisition, is still in the early stages of trunk infrastructure development. This difference highlights a critical reality: land allocation is no longer the primary bottleneck execution velocity is.

Promise vs reality

The industry’s response to PM MITRA reflects a dual narrative. On one side, large-scale manufacturers and industry bodies view the parks as a structural leap. Integrated ecosystems promise to reduce logistics friction, compress lead times, and potentially lower operating costs by 10-12 per cent, bringing India closer to the efficiency benchmarks set by Bangladesh and Vietnam.

On the other side, MSME exporters remain cautious. The persistent inverted duty structure in the MMF segment where fiber attracts higher GST than finished fabric continues to lock up working capital. For smaller firms operating on thin margins, this fiscal distortion offsets many of the efficiency gains promised by physical infrastructure. The tension between physical scale and financial fluidity has become one of the defining challenges of India’s textile policy landscape.

A success story, the Virudhnagar PM MITRA park

The Virudhnagar PM MITRA park offers a glimpse of what successful execution could look like. By aligning with the PM Gati Shakti National Master Plan, the park integrates GIS-based logistics planning with direct port connectivity via VO Chidambaranar Port. This has translated into measurable gains. Early-stage units report a reduction of nearly 12 per cent in logistics costs, alongside the elimination of traditional inland transport delays that could extend up to two weeks. The model demonstrates how infrastructure, when synchronised with national logistics planning, can deliver immediate operational efficiencies rather than deferred benefits.

Execution as the litmus test

Despite strong investor interest estimated at over Rs 63,000 crore across all parks the success of PM MITRA hinges on consistent execution across states. Recognising uneven progress, the Union Budget 2026-27 introduced a ‘Challenge Mode’ framework for future parks, compelling states to compete on parameters such as power tariffs, labor flexibility, and regulatory ease.

This marks a shift from allocation-driven policy to performance-driven competition. The underlying objective is clear: prevent large-scale industrial zones from becoming underutilised land banks and instead ensure they evolve into globally competitive manufacturing hubs.

India’s textile industry, valued at approximately $152 billion, contributes around 2 per cent to GDP and employs over 45 million people. Its long-term ambition, to scale to $250 billion by 2030 rests on a combination of export expansion, infrastructure modernization, and policy alignment.

The 5F vision: Farm to Fiber to Factory to Fashion to Foreign captures this integrated approach. However, as the current phase demonstrates, achieving this vision will depend less on policy intent and more on execution discipline.

India’s textile export story is no longer defined by volume alone. It is increasingly shaped by how effectively the country can integrate infrastructure, resolve fiscal distortions, and sustain diversification in global markets.

The 2.1 per cent export growth in FY 2025–26 may appear modest, but it signals a sector in transition. The real inflection point lies ahead, where the success or failure of mega-scale infrastructure like PM MITRA will determine whether India can move from being a competitive supplier to a dominant global manufacturing hub.

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