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Compliance drives Indias 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.

  

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.

  

By the end of March 2026, Guess, Inc will conclude its 18-year direct retail presence in mainland China, shuttering all remaining brick-and-mortar locations and its Tmall flagship store. This decisive exit follows a turbulent FY26, where the brand’s Asian segment recorded an operating margin of negative 4.5 per cent in Q3, largely due to stagnant retail traffic and a 16 per cent decline in comparable store sales. Market data suggests the brand struggled to maintain its mid-tier ‘affordable luxury’ positioning as Chinese consumers shifted toward high-performance technical gear or hyper-local fast fashion. The closure marks a definitive end to a footprint that once peaked at over 250 stores, signaling a broader industry trend where legacy Western labels are trading high-cost physical storefronts for capital-efficient distribution.

Transitioning to regional licensing and brand elevation

The retreat is the first major operational move since the company’s privatization and the transfer of 51 per cent of its intellectual property to Authentic Brands Group (ABG) in January 2026. Under ABG’s management, Guess is transitioning to a licensing-led model designed to minimize direct operating exposure while maximizing brand value. This ‘asset-light’ approach mirrors the successful restructuring of brands like Forever 21, prioritizing regional partnerships over company-owned retail. While direct storefronts disappear, the brand remains active globally, recently launching its Spring/Summer 2026 campaign featuring Chiara Ferragni to boo its fashion-forward credentials. By offloading underperforming Asian assets, the company aims to focus resources on its resilient European wholesale division, which saw 7 per cent revenue growth in 2025, and high-margin licensing categories like fragrances and accessories.

Guess, Inc. is a global lifestyle brand specializing in denim-led apparel and accessories across 100 countries. Following its 2026 privatization, the brand is scaling through high-margin licensing and digital modernization. With annual revenues stabilizing near $3.2 billion, Guess plans to leverage regional partnerships to regain profitability in volatile emerging markets.

  

Having concluded on March 13, the Spring 2026 edition of Intertextile Shanghai Apparel Fabrics established a definitive roadmap for a textile industry navigating heightened regulatory and consumer scrutiny.

Bringing together over 3,000 exhibitors from 25 countries, the event served as a critical barometer for a Chinese textile market projected to reach RMB 1.85 trillion in 2026. Industry sentiment has shifted notably, with the percentage of global fashion leaders viewing the Chinese market as ‘unpromising’ declining from 41 per cent in 2025 to 28 per cent this year. This renewed optimism is fueled by a pivot toward ‘high-value’ segments, where functional textiles are expected to reach 18.5 million tons in production, representing a 14.2 per centY-o-Y ncrease.

Quantifying the circularity and digital mandate

A defining feature of this year’s fair was the expansion of the Econogy Hub, reflecting a 60 per cent increase in scale as brands race to meet the EU’s 2027 Digital Product Passport (DPP) requirements.

Data presented during the Econogy Talks highlighted, 74 per cent of modern consumers are now willing to pay a premium for fully traceable, verified sustainable items. To support this, exhibitors showcased advanced blockchain-enabled traceability and AI-driven defect detection aimed at reducing production waste. A significant new development was the launch of the Pet Boutique, targeting China’s RMB 3.5 billion pet apparel market, which is currently expanding at a rapid 20 per cent annual clip, offering a lucrative diversification path for traditional garment manufacturers.

Intertextile Shanghai is the world’s leading comprehensive apparel fabric and accessories fair, organized by Messe Frankfurt in partnership with CCPIT-Tex. Covering 190,000 sqm at the NECC, it connects global buyers with specialized zones like SalonEurope and Functional Lab. The platform supports China’s 2026 export target of $285 billion, focusing on a 15th Five-Year Plan transition toward green, intelligent manufacturing.

  

Following the strategic roadmap established at the Nagpur Chintan Shivir, the Ministry of Textiles has initiated a rigorous overhaul of the domestic cotton value chain to bridge the 15 per cent productivity gap between Indian farmers and global benchmarks. With India currently contributing nearly 25 per cent of the world’s cotton area but only 23 per cent of its production, the focus has transitioned from horizontal expansion to vertical yield enhancement. Data from the 2025-26 crop cycle indicates, high-density planting systems and the introduction of climate-resilient seeds could elevate national average yields from $450 kg/ha to nearly $700 kg/ha within three seasons. This shift is critical as the domestic apparel industry aims for a $250 billion valuation by 2030, a goal that remains contingent on the consistent availability of premium, long-staple fiber.

Integrating quality standards for global apparel dominance

The textile sector is currently navigating a period of rapid modernization, where fiber quality is becoming the primary lever for export growth. By mandating stricter Quality Control Orders (QCOs) and promoting ‘Kasturi Cotton India’ branding, the Ministry is positioning domestic mills to capture high-value contracts in the European and North American markets. Dr Anil Mehra, Industry Expert notes, the focus on quality fiber is no longer a choice but a necessity to satisfy the traceability demands of global retail giants. Despite the challenges posed by fluctuating monsoon patterns and rising input costs, the integration of advanced ginning technologies is expected to reduce contamination levels by 30 per cent. This systemic improvement creates a lucrative opportunity for garment exporters to reduce their reliance on imported extra-long staple cotton, thereby strengthening the fiscal health of the entire textile ecosystem.

Operating as the backbone of India’s industrial employment, the textile sector manages a comprehensive value chain from raw fiber to finished fashion. Dominating the global yarn and home textile categories, the industry is now scaling high-performance technical textiles and man-made fibers. Backed by the PLI scheme, the sector targets a 10 per cent CAGR, leveraging its century-old manufacturing heritage to achieve $100 billion in exports by the decade's end.

  

Sri Lanka’s apparel and textile sector is undergoing a strategic recalibration following a 2.82 per cent Y-o-Y decline in export earnings, which settled at $447.25 million in January 2026. This dip primarily stems from a cooling of demand in traditional strongholds, with shipments to the United States and the European Union contracting by 2.73 per cent and 1.82 per cent respectively. Despite these headwinds, the industry remains the bedrock of the national economy, contributing over 51 per cent of total industrial exports. The Joint Apparel Association Forum (JAAF) has set an ambitious recovery target of $5.5 billion for the 2026 fiscal year, pivoting toward high-value, tech-infused garments to offset volume losses in basic apparel.

Leveraging trade reforms and digital transformation

A significant competitive advantage has emerged through the revised UK Developing Countries Trading Scheme (DCTS), which took effect on January 1, 2026. This policy allows Sri Lankan manufacturers to source raw materials globally while maintaining duty-free access to the British market - a shift expected to drive UK-bound export growth by over 10 per cent. To capitalize on this, the sector is accelerating the operationalization of the Eravur Fabric Park to boost local raw material verticalization. Furthermore, the industry is integrating AI-driven digital sampling and blockchain traceability to meet the rigorous ESG documentation now required by global regulators, positioning the ‘Your Vital Island’ brand as a premier, ethical alternative to low-cost regional competitors.

The Sri Lankan apparel industry employs over 300,000 workers, primarily women, and is globally recognized for its ‘Garments without Guilt’ ethical standards. With 55 platinum-certified WRAP facilities, the sector is transitioning from mass production to a design-led, high-tech hub. Despite current global inflationary pressures, the industry targets $8 billion in annual revenue by 2030 through aggressive expansion into ASEAN and Middle Eastern retail corridors.

  

FW Big Story The second life economy gets a boost as resale outgrows traditional apparel retail

 

For decades, resale existed in the margins of the apparel economy, thrift stores, peer-to-peer marketplaces, and charity bins quietly absorbing what mainstream fashion discarded. That hierarchy has now inverted. What was once the afterlife of clothing has become one of retail’s fastest-growing frontiers, and the industry’s biggest names are no longer watching from the sidelines. They are buying back into their own closets.

The global secondhand apparel market, valued roughly at $210 billion in 2025, is on track to grow to over $535 billion by 2026. Growth is running nearly three times faster than traditional retail. In a sector where single-digit gains are often celebrated as victories, resale’s double-digit expansion reads less like a niche trend and more like a structural rewrite of the fashion business model.

When the world’s largest fashion groups start treating resale not as a sustainability experiment but as core infrastructure, it signals something larger than optics. It signals that the economics have tipped. Few moves showcase this shift more clearly than those of Inditex, parent of Zara. After generating €35.9 billion in 2024 revenue and posting continued gains through 2025, the group has chosen not to cede the secondhand economy to third-party apps. Instead, it is internalising it. Through Zara Pre-Owned, the company is attempting to capture margin not once, but twice, on the same garment, first at initial sale and again at resale while collecting the most valuable commodity of all: lifecycle data. This is no longer about clearing old stock. It is about owning the entire lifespan of a shirt.

Growth that surpasses traditional retail

The difference between resale and conventional retail becomes stark when viewed side by side. Secondhand apparel is expanding at an annual pace of roughly 12.6 per cent, while traditional apparel retail limps along at about 2.4 per cent. By 2026, resale alone is projected to reach $535 billion in value, whereas primary retail remains stuck in low single-digit growth.

The drivers behind each segment reveal why the gap is widening. Resale thrives on sustainability concerns and what analysts increasingly call ‘value hacking’ consumers extracting maximum utility and residual value from every purchase. Traditional retail, by contrast, still leans on seasonal drops and trend cycles, a formula that struggles in an inflation-conscious world.

Women’s apparel dominates the resale mix, accounting for over half the category’s volume. That concentration matters: it aligns resale with fashion’s most frequent buyers and fastest inventory churn, ensuring a steady pipeline of supply. The implication is clear. Resale isn’t cannibalising the core market; it is becoming the core market’s growth engine.

Regulation turns waste into financial liability

If growth is one catalyst, regulation is another. The European Union has moved beyond rhetoric to enforcement. Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) rules now require brands to finance the collection, sorting and recycling of textile waste. For high-volume retailers, those costs are no rounding error. Every unsold or discarded garment carries a financial burden.

Against that backdrop, resale morphs from a marketing initiative into a balance-sheet strategy. Keeping garments in circulation lowers disposal fees and demonstrates longevity metrics that regulators increasingly reward. An item that ends in landfill is now an expense. The same item traded through a brand’s own app is an asset with recoverable value. That simple reframing is pushing boardrooms toward circularity faster than any climate pledge ever did.

Durability becomes a profit lever

The resale economy is also quietly rewriting how clothes are made. Fast fashion historically optimised for speed and cost, not endurance. But resale economics punish disposability. A garment that fails after a handful of wears cannot generate second-cycle revenue.

As a result, durability is becoming commercially rational. Rivals such as H&M and Shein have accelerated their own recommerce plays. Shein’s Exchange platform, in particular, has expanded across Europe in part to counter criticism of its ultra-fast model while demonstrating that its products can have a second life.

Meanwhile, consumer psychology is evolving just as quickly. Shoppers increasingly evaluate garments the way they might electronics or cars: with an eye on resale value. Industry surveys suggest that well over half now consider what an item might fetch later before buying it today. Clothing is no longer purely expressive; it is quasi-financial. In that environment, quality stops being a cost centre and becomes an investment.

Beyond the immediate transaction lies a deeper prize information. Direct-to-consumer resale platforms give brands visibility into what was once a black box: how long customers keep items, how frequently they resell, which fabrics retain value, which silhouettes depreciate fastest. That data flows back into design studios and buying teams, shaping decisions months before collections hit the floor. Resale thus doubles as real-time market research.

Trade-in credits further tighten the loop. Instead of cashing out to independent platforms, customers receive brand currency, effectively pre-committing their next purchase. Loyalty ceases to be promotional and becomes structural. Marketplaces like ThredUp report that secondhand is increasingly embedded in everyday budgets, with many younger shoppers funding new purchases by selling old ones. The closet has become both wardrobe and wallet.

Inside Zara’s ecosystem

The most telling example of recommerce as operating model rather than side project is unfolding inside Zara’s ecosystem. Since launching across multiple European markets and the US, Zara Pre-Owned has integrated resale, repair and donation directly into the brand’s primary app, which attracts tens of millions of daily visitors. By embedding recommerce into the same interface customers already use to shop, the company has removed the friction that historically kept resale on separate platforms. The results point to a powerful flywheel.

Users who participate in resale engage more frequently with the brand than those who only buy new. Nearly half of sellers reinvest their digital credit almost immediately into fresh seasonal collections, accelerating revenue velocity. And by using its global network of more than 5,500 stores as drop-off hubs, Zara cuts reverse-logistics costs dramatically compared with pure-play digital marketplaces such as Vinted or Depop, which must build standalone collection systems. Scale, once a blunt instrument for pushing volume, becomes a surgical tool for circular efficiency.

Inditex’s continued investments, running into billions annually in logistics upgrades and textile-to-textile recycling suggest the group sees recommerce not as an adjunct business but as the backbone of its next growth phase. The ambition is nothing less than to transform from the archetype of fast fashion into a leader of commercial circularity.

From linear sales to lifetime ownership

What is unfolding across global apparel is not simply the rise of thrift chic or sustainability marketing. It is a reconfiguration of who controls value. For years, brands relinquished ownership the moment a product left the store. Now they are clawing it back tracking, repairing, reselling and monetising each piece multiple times. The old linear model of make, sell, discard is giving way to a loop in which garments behave more like assets than consumables.

In that loop, the winners will not necessarily be those who produce the most clothing, but those who extract the most value from every item already made. Resale began as retail’s afterthought. It is quickly becoming its operating system.

  

Rising polyester costs shake Indias textile manufacturing hubs

 

India’s synthetic textile industry is confronting a sudden and destabilizing price shock that is reverberating across its vast manufacturing ecosystem. In major textile clusters such as Surat and Ludhiana, where polyester-based fabrics dominate production lines, the past two weeks have been marked by uncertainty, stalled procurement, and mounting financial pressure. What began as a sharp rise in polyester melt prices has quickly evolved into a structural disruption affecting spinning mills, weaving units, and garment exporters across the country.

The crisis has been triggered by a steep and unusually rapid escalation in the cost of polyester melt, the molten polymer that forms the base input for producing synthetic fibres and yarns. Polyester melt is the fundamental building block for polyester staple fibre, partially oriented yarn, and a wide range of apparel and technical textiles. When its price shifts, the entire textile value chain from petrochemical processors to garment manufacturers absorbs the impact. Since the end of February 2026, polyester melt prices in India have surged by more than Rs 30 per kg within days. For an industry that traditionally operates on margins of barely three to five per cent, such an abrupt escalation represents far more than a routine fluctuation. It threatens to destabilize production economics across multiple stages of the textile supply chain.

Price rise at the heart of the synthetic chain

The rapid escalation in polyester melt prices is closely tied to movements in the cost of its key chemical inputs. Polyester is produced through the polymerization of two primary petrochemical derivatives: Purified Terephthalic Acid (PTA) and Monoethylene Glycol (MEG). Any upward movement in these feedstocks is quickly transmitted into the price of polyester melt and subsequently into fibres and yarns. Over an 11-day period, the market witnessed a steep rise across several of these inputs, illustrating the speed with which cost pressures can cascade through the industry.

Table: The 11-day price escalation

Material Component

Price (Feb 25)

Price (Mar 11)

Absolute Change

% Variance

Polyester Melt

Rs 89.25 /kg

Rs 120.25 /kg

+ Rs 31.00

34.70%

PTA (Delivered)

Rs 78.40 /kg

Rs 86.90 /kg

+ Rs 8.50

10.80%

MEG (Spot)

Rs 52.10 /kg

Rs 61.40 /kg

+ Rs 9.30

17.80%

PSF (1.2 Denier)

Rs 102.25 /kg

Rs 118.50 /kg

+ Rs 16.25

15.90%

Energy markets and shipping risks behind the disruption

The rise in feedstock prices cannot be separated from broader developments in global energy and trade markets. The polyester value chain is deeply intertwined with the petroleum sector because its core inputs originate from petrochemical derivatives produced from crude oil. Over the past month, global crude prices have trended upward, with Brent crude approaching the $95 per barrel mark amid renewed geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. Rising crude prices directly affect the cost of petrochemical intermediates such as naphtha, a key feedstock used in the production of PTA and MEG. As refinery and petrochemical producers adjust their pricing to reflect higher raw material costs, the impact inevitably reaches downstream industries such as textiles.

Shipping dynamics have added another layer of pressure. The Gulf region remains a critical trade corridor for petrochemical imports into India. Escalating security concerns around the Strait of Hormuz have prompted marine insurers to raise premiums for vessels transporting chemical cargo. These higher insurance costs effectively function as an additional tax on imported feedstocks, increasing the landed cost of MEG and related chemicals by an estimated 15 to 20 per cent.

Domestic supply disruptions have further intensified the situation. Several major petrochemical facilities in India underwent unscheduled maintenance in early March, tightening spot availability of essential inputs at precisely the moment when international prices were already rising. With domestic supplies constrained, buyers were forced to compete aggressively for limited inventories in the spot market, accelerating the pace of price increases across the synthetic fibre chain.

Ripple effect textile value chain

The escalation in polyester melt prices has triggered a chain reaction throughout India’s textile ecosystem. From fibre producers and spinning mills to weaving units and garment exporters, each stage of the value chain is experiencing its own form of financial strain. Polyester fibre producers were among the first to feel the pressure as feedstock costs climbed rapidly. In response, they adjusted prices for polyester staple fibre and yarns, transferring the cost burden downstream.

Spinning mills, which rely heavily on these fibres, suddenly found themselves facing sharply higher raw material expenses. The impact becomes even more pronounced at the weaving and knitting stages, where yarn costs represent the single largest component of fabric production. When yarn prices rise abruptly, small and medium weaving units often lack the financial capacity to absorb the increase. Many have therefore chosen to limit procurement until the market stabilizes.

Garment manufacturers face a different challenge. Apparel exporters typically operate under contracts negotiated months in advance with international buyers, where prices are fixed long before production begins. When fabric costs rise unexpectedly, manufacturers cannot easily pass on the additional expense to clients. As a result, the sudden increase in synthetic fibre costs directly erodes profit margins across export-oriented apparel businesses.

Competitive pressures in global synthetic apparel markets

India’s synthetic apparel sector is also confronting rising competitive pressure in global markets. Countries such as Bangladesh and Vietnam have developed supply chains that allow them to source polyester chips and yarns from China at relatively stable or subsidized rates. These arrangements provide manufacturers in those countries with a degree of insulation during periods of raw material volatility.

Indian textile producers, by contrast, rely heavily on domestic petrochemical pricing structures. When polyester melt prices surge within the country, Indian-made synthetic garments can quickly become more expensive than those produced in competing markets. Industry estimates suggest that the current cost differential could temporarily raise the price of Indian synthetic apparel exports by between 12 and 15 per cent. In the global fashion industry—where sourcing decisions often hinge on marginal cost differences—such disparities can significantly influence procurement strategies adopted by international retailers.

Crisis in Surat’s weaving sector

The effects of the price shock become particularly visible at the level of individual manufacturing units. In Surat, one of India’s largest hubs for polyester fabric production, many small weaving enterprises are struggling with the sudden escalation in yarn prices.

A mid-sized weaving unit operating forty-eight looms recently experienced its yarn procurement cost increase from Rs 110 per kilogram to Rs 126 within a week. This dramatic shift altered the economics of its operations almost immediately. Orders that were priced before the surge are now being completed at a loss. According to the unit’s management, the current production cycle is generating losses of roughly Rs 8 per meter of fabric when using previously purchased yarn. Procuring fresh yarn at the new market rate would deepen those losses to nearly Rs 15 per meter.

Under these circumstances, the company has chosen to complete existing orders while temporarily suspending new production commitments. This decision reflects a broader pattern across the Surat cluster, where many smaller manufacturers are prioritizing survival and liquidity preservation until raw material prices stabilize.

The broader financial pressure on the textile ecosystem can be observed across different industry segments.

Table: Sector-wise cost impact

Industry segment

Raw material dependency

Estimated margin impact

Current status

Spinning Mills

High (Melt/Chips)

-130 to -150 bps

Production cuts (30-40%)

Weaving/Knitting

High (Yarn)

-200 to -250 bps

Widespread partial shutdowns

Garment Export

Moderate (Fabric)

-5% to -8%

Risk of order cancellations

Technical Textiles

Extreme (High-Tenacity)

-300 bps

Contract renegotiations active

Meanwhile, the sector is confronting another challenge: a slowdown in market transactions. Buyers across the value chain are reluctant to procure large volumes of raw materials at current prices, anticipating that costs may eventually decline. Sellers, however, cannot lower prices without incurring losses because their own feedstock expenses remain elevated. This standoff has created a form of market paralysis, with trading activity slowing and working capital cycles becoming increasingly strained.

The limits of rPET

Some manufacturers have begun exploring recycled polyester fibre, commonly known as rPET, as a possible substitute for virgin polyester inputs. Recycled fibres derived from plastic waste can sometimes offer cost advantages when crude oil prices rise, making them an attractive option during periods of petrochemical volatility. However, the transition toward recycled inputs faces practical constraints.

Supplies of certified recycled polyester remain limited within India, and exporters supplying international markets must comply with strict sustainability certification systems such as the Global Recycled Standard. Obtaining and maintaining these certifications increases operational costs and reduces the immediate financial advantage of switching to recycled fibres. Consequently, while rPET may play a larger role in the long-term evolution of the synthetic textile sector, it cannot fully offset the current supply pressures created by rising virgin polyester prices.

Policy relief and the debate over tax structure

Industry stakeholders are also closely monitoring policy developments that could help alleviate some of the financial pressure. One issue attracting particular attention is the inverted tax structure within the Goods and Services Tax regime. Under the current system, certain raw materials used in textile production are taxed at higher rates than finished garments. This discrepancy leads to the accumulation of input tax credits throughout the manufacturing chain, effectively locking up significant amounts of working capital.

Estimates suggest that correcting this imbalance could release approximately Rs 3,500 crore in blocked credits. While such reforms would not directly reduce polyester feedstock prices, they could provide much-needed liquidity for manufacturers struggling to manage rising raw material costs and declining transaction volumes.

An uncertain quarter

Looking ahead, the immediate outlook for India’s synthetic textile sector remains uncertain. Much will depend on the trajectory of global crude oil prices, the stability of maritime shipping routes in the Gulf region, and the speed at which domestic petrochemical plants return to full operational capacity. Until these factors stabilize, volatility is likely to remain a defining characteristic of the polyester market.

Analysts anticipate that production volumes in major textile clusters such as Surat and Ludhiana could decline by between 10 and 15 per cent over the next two months as manufacturers adopt a cautious wait-and-watch approach. For a sector that forms the backbone of India’s textile exports and supports millions of jobs, the recent surge in polyester melt prices highlights a deeper structural vulnerability: the country’s synthetic textile industry remains closely tied to the fluctuations of global petrochemical markets. As long as those upstream forces remain volatile, their ripple effects will continue to shape the fortunes of India’s textile producers.

  

Petal & Pup has officially debuted a comprehensive brand identity evolution, marked by the launch of a global ‘evergreen’ campaign titled ‘Aussie Born. Loved Everywhere.’ This strategic refresh introduces a refined visual language, including an updated logo and a nature-inspired color palette that draws directly from the brand’s Australian roots - specifically highlighting native florals like the signature Protea. According to Victoria Estella Perry, Brand President, the initiative serves as a definitive chapter in the company’s evolution, designed to resonate with an international community of women while reinforcing the brand's confidence and longevity in a competitive fashion landscape. Conceptualized and executed entirely by an all-women team,the campaign emphasizes authentic storytelling to foster deeper emotional connections with its customer base.

Scaling omnichannel presence via strategic retail partnerships

Beyond the aesthetic updates, the rebrand underscores Petal & Pup’s aggressive growth trajectory for 2026. After achieving strong performance within its existing wholesale partnerships - most notably with Nordstrom and David Jones - the brand is actively diversifying its distribution channels. Parent company a.k.a. Brands has confirmed plans to launch the label with Dillard’s, Von Maur, and select independent boutiques throughout 2026. This expansion complements the brand’s ‘test and repeat’ merchandising model, which allows for weekly product introductions based on real-time data insights. As Petal & Pup pivots to incorporate a broader assortment of casual wear and knitwear, the brand aims to capture increased everyday demand, positioning itself as a high-velocity fashion destination for next-generation consumers across online and physical retail environments.

A digitally native womenswear brand founded in Queensland, Australia, in 2014, Petal & Pup specializes in feminine, trend-forward apparel, accessories, and jewelry. Now part of the a.k.a. Brands portfolio, the company focuses on rapid global omnichannel growth, currently scaling through major retail partnerships and online expansion.

  

The Textile Today Innovation Hub (TTIH) hosted a high-profile Iftar and networking session on March 11, 2026, at the Uttara Club, Dhaka, marking a critical moment for Bangladesh’s textile and apparel sector. As the nation approaches the 2026 Least Developed Country (LDC) - graduation - a transition that threatens duty-free access to major markets - industry leaders emphasized the urgent need for a shift from volume-driven production to high-value innovation. The gathering served as a strategic forum for prominent executives from Dysin Group, Rh Corporation, and Mosharraf Group to discuss the integration of AI-powered process optimizations and circularity. With export targets set at $63.5 billion for FY2025-26, the consensus among attendees was that maintaining a competitive edge now depends on collective efforts to build resilient, tech-enabled supply chains.

Nurturing future-ready leadership through targeted R&D

Under the leadership of Engr Ehsanul Karim Kaiser, Chairman, the event highlighted the Textile Today Innovation Hub’s role as a catalyst for professional development and industrial performance. TTIH has already supported over 290 innovation projects across specialized cells, focusing on efficiency, textile processing, and technical fabrics. Tareq Amin, Founder and CEO, Textile Today, noted, the platform’s mission is to foster a ‘culture of innovation’ that prepares the next generation of industry leaders to navigate upcoming EU sustainability mandates and the Digital Product Passport (DPP) phase-in. By providing localized data governance and R&D support, the Hub is enabling manufacturers to upgrade unit value through productivity gains, ensuring that Bangladesh remains a strategic global sourcing destination in a post-LDC landscape.

Advancing industry knowledge

Textile Today is a premier global media and knowledge platform dedicated to the textile and apparel industry. Headquartered in Dhaka, it operates specialized Innovation Cells and the Textile Talent Hunt to drive research and leadership. The organization aims to facilitate double-digit export growth through its 2026 roadmap, focusing on man-made fibers (MMF), digital traceability, and green manufacturing integration.

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