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APEC to overhaul digital infrastructure for garment exporters
The Apparel Export Promotion Council (AEPC) has initiated a strategic collaboration with the National Logistics Development and Strategic Logistics (NLDSL) to overhaul the digital infrastructure supporting Indian garment exporters. By integrating the National Logistics Portal with apparel-specific trade processes, this partnership aims to address critical inefficiencies in the supply chain that currently contribute to elevated logistics costs. Industry analysts estimate, logistics expenses account for nearly 14 per cent of India’s GDP, significantly higher than the 8 per cent-9 per cent average in developed economies. This digital integration is projected to reduce turnaround times at ports and improve real-time freight visibility, potentially lowering logistical overheads by 5 per cent to 7 per cent for mid-sized exporters over the next two fiscal years.
Scaling through technological integration
This move aligns with broader national efforts to elevate India’s textile export valuation. By streamlining documentation and customs clearance through unified digital gateways, apparel manufacturers can better compete with regional rivals. AEPC leadership noted, the primary focus remains on automating labor-intensive logistical tasks, thereby allowing exporters to focus on value-added production. A successful pilot implementation at major textile hubs has already shown a 15 per cent improvement in processing speed for air-freight shipments. As global buyers increasingly demand transparency, this robust digital backbone will likely serve as a vital differentiator for Indian firms aiming to capture larger shares of the United States and European markets.
Industry context and strategic direction
The Apparel Export Promotion Council acts as the official nodal agency under the Ministry of Textiles, facilitating international trade for Indian garment manufacturers. With a focus on ready-made garments, the council promotes growth through policy advocacy, skill development, and global market expansion, aiming to scale India's textile exports to $100 billion.
IKEA transforms India into global product development hub
IKEA has officially inaugurated its fourth global Product Development Centre in India, marking a definitive evolution in the Swedish retailer’s operational strategy. Moving beyond its historical role as a localized sourcing hub, the company has incorporated a new entity to spearhead design and development for both the Indian market and global export. According to Oskar Lindkvist, Managing Director of the new centre, this milestone completes the brand’s value chain integration in the region, where retail, supply, and now product creation coexist. By positioning India alongside established design hubs in Sweden, China, and Vietnam, the company aims to leverage domestic manufacturing prowess to produce items that resonate with local consumer preferences while maintaining the scalability required for its international supply network.
Scaling textile innovation and sourcing
The centre has been tasked with curating a catalog of 500 affordable, market-specific products, with a heavy emphasis on home textiles such as premium linens, rugs, and upholstery. This initiative directly supports IKEA’s broader objective to increase local procurement from 30 per cent to 50 per cent within its Indian retail footprint. With roughly 150 textile-led products already introduced to the market and 220 in the design phase, the company is capitalizing on India’s deep-rooted craftsmanship and cotton-based supply chain. By embedding product development closer to the origin of raw materials, IKEA seeks to bypass traditional lead-time bottlenecks and ensure that design adjustments remain responsive to evolving consumer lifestyle trends. This strategic realignment reinforces India’s status as a critical node in IKEA’s effort to quadruple its national store count and harmonize its local offerings with a robust global export strategy.
Building an omnichannel presence
IKEA is a global home furnishings retailer specializing in ready-to-assemble furniture and textiles. In India, the company focuses on building an omnichannel retail presence alongside a massive sourcing network. With over 40 long-term suppliers, IKEA is aggressively expanding its physical footprint and local manufacturing to reach domestic scale and global export targets.
US tech wealth emerges as luxury’s primary growth engine
As traditional luxury strongholds in China grapple with structural economic headwinds and geopolitical instability ripples through European travel corridors, global fashion houses are aggressively reallocating resources toward the United States. The sector’s current strategic focus is anchored in the resilience of American high-end consumers, whose purchasing power has been significantly expanded by the sustained rally in artificial intelligence and technology equities. Data from recent industry reports underscores this trend; North America secured the top position for global luxury store openings in 2025, accounting for 27 per cent of new retail footprint, effectively surpassing both Europe and China. For many houses, the US is now viewed as an unpenetrated opportunity, with store density remaining remarkably low relative to the country’s concentration of ultra-high-net-worth individuals.
Omnichannel expansion and experiential retail
Luxury brands are evolving beyond legacy metropolitan flagships, favoring localized retail strategies in affluent regions where the tech-wealth demographic resides. This tactical shift is complemented by high-profile, localized runway presentations, with houses such as Dior, Gucci, and Zegna hosting seasonal collections across the US to deepen emotional resonance with domestic spenders. Industry analysts suggest that this movement represents more than a temporary reaction to global volatility; it is a fundamental realignment toward the most stable source of luxury consumption. By securing a stronger foothold in the American market, brands aim to mitigate the fiscal pressures of global currency headwinds and provide a robust counter-balance to the decelerating performance observed in broader, formerly high-growth international territories.
The luxury sector’s American expansion
Global luxury conglomerates, including LVMH, Kering, and Moncler, are currently prioritizing US expansion to capture tech-enriched wealth. Key target markets include emerging affluent hubs and coastal cities. Strategic plans emphasize physical store growth and high-impact runway events. The financial outlook remains cautiously optimistic, with analysts projecting 6 per cent organic sales growth for 2026.
Cost spiral across fibers, chemicals and logistics squeezes India’s apparel exports

India’s textile manufacturing sector has entered one of its most financially strained periods in recent years as increasing fiber, yarn, chemical, and logistics costs collide with rigid international buyer contracts. What initially appeared to be another cyclical rise in raw material prices has evolved into a structural operating crisis for the country’s export-oriented textile hubs, particularly in Tiruppur and Karur, where small and mid-sized manufacturers are struggling to preserve already thin margins.
Despite outward stability in export order flows, the underlying economics of apparel and home textile production have deteriorated sharply. Industry stakeholders say the simultaneous rise in nearly every major production input has erased traditional cost buffers and intensified pressure on working capital availability.
Fiber inflation breaks historic norms
The sharpest disruption has emerged from upstream raw material markets, where core textile intermediates have moved far beyond conventional pricing ranges. In Tiruppur, India’s largest knitwear cluster, hosiery yarn prices have risen by Rs 61 per kg over the past five months, including a steep Rs 20 per kg jump in May alone.
At the same time, manufacturers in Karur’s home textile belt are reporting overall raw material inflation of between 40 and 60 per cent. Synthetic fiber streams have witnessed particularly severe escalation. Polyester staple fiber prices have climbed from Rs 80 per kg to Rs 130 per kg, driven largely by higher crude oil prices and persistent geopolitical instability affecting major Middle Eastern shipping corridors.
The inflationary cycle has spread rapidly across secondary processing operations as well. Dyes, chemical compounds, finishing agents, and industrial gases have all become more expensive, while intermittent shortages of critical industrial inputs have disrupted advanced processing lines. The cumulative impact has pushed garment manufacturing costs higher by 15 to 20 per cent across several product categories.
Table: Comparative increase of primary textile inputs (May 2026)
|
Material/cost component |
Historic baseline rate |
Current market rate |
Net percentage increase |
|
Hosiery Yarn (Tiruppur Hub) |
Base Level |
+Rs 61/kg (Cumulative) |
Sharp 5-month uptick |
|
Polyester Staple Fiber |
Rs 80/kg |
Rs 130/kg |
62.5% Appreciation |
|
Karur Home Textile Raw Materials |
Standard Matrix |
Structural Variance |
40% – 60% Inflation |
|
Downstream Garment Manufacturing |
Standard Cost Sheet |
Adjusted Baseline |
15-20% Cost Escalation |
The current pressure differs fundamentally from past yarn cycles because every primary input is inflating in tandem. We are absorbing higher synthetic fiber costs, higher processing charges, and an inflexible logistics premium simultaneously, while working capital availability contracts,” opines K Venkatachalam, Chief Advisor at Southern India Mills’ Association.
Buyers hold the pricing line
The industry’s biggest challenge lies not merely in rising costs, but in the inability to transfer those increases downstream. International retail buyers, operating amid slowing consumer demand in North America and Europe, have largely refused to renegotiate procurement contracts signed before the latest inflationary cycle began.
This has left Indian small and medium enterprises effectively absorbing the increase themselves to avoid penalties, shipment disruptions, or the risk of losing long-term clients. Manufacturers say they are continuing to execute export orders at historical price points despite substantial escalation in production outlays.
The financial strain has been got further push from policy and supply-side pressures within India. The reintroduction of the 11 per cent cotton import duty in January 2026, following the expiration of a temporary exemption in December, has tightened access to imported specialty cotton varieties while raising the domestic pricing floor for lint procurement.
Alongside raw material inflation, textile clusters are also dealing with seasonal labour shortages. A significant portion of the workforce has temporarily migrated back to agricultural regions for cultivation activities, forcing mills and processing units to operate below optimal capacity levels. Lower utilization has further inflated per-unit production costs by spreading fixed overheads across reduced output volumes.
Manufacturers shift to defensive models
As operating conditions worsen, a growing number of mid-sized textile companies are restructuring production strategies to reduce dependence on volatile commodity cycles.
Several fabric manufacturers in western India have begun shifting away from traditional single-fiber production models by increasing the use of blended and alternative cellulosic materials. Advanced material-planning systems are being deployed to optimize fiber combinations and reduce exposure to cotton and pure polyester price swings.
At the same time, manufacturers are adopting stricter commercial controls to stabilize margins. Some exporters are using detailed cost-accounting frameworks to negotiate partial open-book pricing adjustments with global buyers, particularly for long-duration supply programs. Others are reducing production turnaround cycles from the traditional 90-day model to nearly 45 days in an effort to minimize exposure to sudden spot-market fluctuations during contract execution.
Forward procurement of chemical intermediates and tighter inventory planning have also emerged as critical survival mechanisms. Industry executives say companies capable of combining operational agility with disciplined sourcing are still managing to preserve low single-digit margins, while slower operators dependent on spot purchases face intermittent production stoppages and liquidity stress.
Export hubs face defining transition
The pressure comes at a crucial time for Tiruppur and Karur, two of India’s most strategically important textile manufacturing centres. Together, the clusters account for more than 60 per cent of India’s knitwear and home textile exports and supply major retail chains across Europe and North America.
Both clusters are targeting a combined export ambition of $20 billion by 2030, but current market conditions are forcing businesses to prioritize financial resilience over expansion. Industry guidance now points toward a temporary stabilization phase over the next fiscal year as manufacturers modernize processing infrastructure, diversify sourcing strategies, and attempt to adapt to prolonged global supply chain volatility.
For India’s textile value chain, the current crisis is being viewed not as a passing inflationary spike, but as a reset that could permanently alter sourcing practices, supplier relationships, and manufacturing economics across the country’s apparel export sector.
Victoria’s Secret records robust Q1 growth amid strategic repositioning
Victoria’s Secret & Co has reported a resilient performance for Q1, FY26, with net sales climbing by 15.3 per cent to $1.56 billion. Compared to the $1.35 billion recorded in the previous year, this outcome reflects the effectiveness of the brand’s refined merchandising strategies and an invigorated approach to global retail operations. Buoyed by this performance, management has upwardly adjusted its full-year net sales forecast, projecting a range between $7.03 billion and $7.13 billion. The positive trajectory suggests that recent efforts to diversify product offerings beyond core intimate apparel into broader lifestyle categories are yielding tangible results among a broader consumer base.
Adapting to global retail dynamics
The competitive landscape of the lingerie and personal care sector remains intense, yet Victoria’s Secret is successfully reclaiming market share through localized retail experiences and enhanced digital integration. According to Jonathan H Reed, Senior Retail Market Analyst, the double-digit sales growth demonstrates that the brand’s efforts to align its product portfolio with contemporary comfort and diversity expectations are resonating with international markets. A brief case study of the brand’s recent North American store renovations, which incorporated more accessible inventory displays and personalized fitting services, indicated a 9 percent increase in transaction volume. As the firm continues to prioritize operational efficiency and brand revitalization, these gains underscore a stabilized financial outlook that reinforces investor confidence for the remainder of the fiscal year.
Corporate profile and market scope
Victoria’s Secret is a leading global retailer specializing in intimate apparel, sleepwear, and beauty products. With an extensive footprint across international markets, the company targets premium fashion segments. Its strategy emphasizes store modernization and product diversification. Financially, the firm demonstrates stable growth, with a legacy spanning over four decades.
Source Fashion elevates technical literacy in supply chain management
As the fashion industry grapples with the complexities of circularity and supply chain transparency, the upcoming July 2026 edition of Source Fashion at Excel London is re-centering the conversation on fundamental manufacturing expertise. The returning ‘Fashion Deconstructed’ program serves as a strategic intervention, designed to bridge the widening gap between high-level sourcing decisions and the technical realities of garment production. By providing a platform for tactile engagement with textile craftsmanship - ranging from traditional hand-weaving to advanced repair techniques - the event aims to equip procurement professionals and brand representatives with the granular knowledge required to navigate modern sustainability mandates and regulatory frameworks effectively.
Aligning practical skills with commercial value
The shift toward responsible production is no longer merely a branding exercise but a critical commercial imperative. Industry feedback suggests, that sourcing professionals who possess a deeper understanding of material manipulation and garment construction are better positioned to drive operational efficiencies. Suzanne Ellingham, Event Director, notes, the program transforms abstract debates into actionable insight, stating that the industry’s future competitiveness hinges on ‘reconnecting sourcing professionals with the knowledge and skills behind fashion production.’ A recent case study focusing on participants from the previous edition indicated that 65 per cent of attendees reported improved efficacy in their vendor negotiations after gaining direct exposure to the manufacturing limitations and possibilities showcased at Fashion Deconstructed. This focus on technical literacy is essential for brands aiming to balance cost management with the increasing demand for sustainable, long-term product value.
Platform and event overview
Source Fashion is a premier sourcing exhibition connecting international manufacturers with global fashion brands. Based in London, the platform facilitates partnerships across the supply chain, emphasizing transparency and sustainable innovation. The organization aims to expand its influence through educational summits and recurring industry networking events, historically rooted in fashion manufacturing.
USDA strategy targets long-term viability for US cotton producers
The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) has introduced a comprehensive framework aimed at reinforcing the domestic cotton farm economy against intensifying global market volatility and climatic pressures. This policy initiative focuses on enhancing yield consistency through the adoption of precision agriculture technologies, which allow for granular moisture management and optimized input utilization. By aligning federal support mechanisms with sustainability metrics, the department aims to ensure that US-grown cotton remains a competitive, high-quality fiber choice for international spinning mills. Industry analysts indicate that this intervention is critical to mitigating the impact of recent price fluctuations, which have challenged the profitability of large-scale cotton operations across the Sun Belt region.
Navigating global supply chain shifts
As global textile manufacturers increasingly prioritize supply chain transparency and carbon footprint reduction, the US cotton sector is recalibrating its export strategy to emphasize environmental stewardship. The initiative includes provisions for improved storage infrastructure and modernized logistics to reduce the frequency of contamination incidents, which have historically hampered trade efficiency. Dr Marcus Thorne, an agricultural policy specialist, notes, this commitment to standardized quality assurance is essential for maintaining market share against lower-cost synthetic alternatives. By bridging the gap between farm-level innovation and the textile industry’s requirement for traceable, high-tenacity fibers, the US government seeks to establish a resilient foundation for cotton cultivation that withstands both geopolitical trade disruptions and shifting consumer demand for sustainable apparel materials.
US cotton farm economy
The US cotton sector serves as a global leader in high-quality fiber production, prioritizing technologically advanced cultivation methods. Targeting export markets in Asia and the Americas, the industry emphasizes sustainable, traceable supply chains. Growth plans center on yield optimization and infrastructure investment to ensure long-term competitiveness against synthetic fiber demand.
Muga Silk gains global traction via strategic branding
The Government of Assam has intensified its efforts to position Muga silk, the ‘Golden Silk of Assam,’ as a marquee luxury product in the international textile market through the ongoing Mission Senehjori. This initiative aims to bridge the gap between traditional weaving clusters and high-end global fashion houses by emphasizing the unique, natural golden hue and superior tensile strength of the fiber. As the textile industry shifts toward sustainable and bio-based luxury materials, Muga’s Geographical Indication (GI) status serves as a cornerstone for its premium branding. The state government is currently facilitating direct partnerships with European luxury distributors, focusing on traceability and ethical sourcing to meet the stringent compliance requirements of the EU’s sustainable product regulations.
Scalability challenges and market integration
Despite the high global demand for sustainable silks, the sector faces significant hurdles regarding raw material supply and the preservation of traditional sericulture techniques. Muga cultivation is labor-intensive and climate-sensitive, requiring a robust support structure for the weaver community. Recent data suggests, the state is investing in advanced storage infrastructure and quality certification laboratories to maintain consistency for international buyers. Industry experts suggest, the integration of digital product passports will prove decisive in securing long-term contracts with global brands. By formalizing the value chain and protecting the artisan’s intellectual property, Assam aims to transition from sporadic craft sales to a sustained, high-value export presence, ensuring that the intrinsic value of Muga remains recognized across the global apparel and home textile sectors.
Renowned for luster and durability
Muga silk is a premium, natural golden silk indigenous to Assam, renowned for its luster and durability. Primarily used for high-end traditional attire and luxury lifestyle products, the sector focuses on empowering rural artisan clusters. Current initiatives aim for global market expansion through standardized quality certification and GI-protected branding.
Lambodhara Textiles reports robust financial performance in FY26
Lambodhara Textiles has reported a robust financial performance for FY26, headlined by a significant 61per cent Y-o-Y increase in Profit After Tax (PAT). This rise in profitability underscores the company’s strategic shift toward specialty yarn production and improved manufacturing throughput. By optimizing its operational overheads and reducing waste in the spinning process, the firm has effectively insulated its margins from the volatility typical of raw cotton price cycles. Management attributed this growth to a renewed focus on high-margin synthetic and blended yarns, which have seen sustained demand from domestic apparel manufacturers looking to reduce their reliance on imported fiber alternatives.
Strengthening competitive positioning
The company’s ability to scale output while maintaining cost discipline has positioned it as a reliable supplier in the competitive spinning landscape. Beyond the headline profit figures, Lambodhara has actively reinvested in machinery upgrades, specifically targeting advanced ring-spinning technology that supports finer yarn counts favored by premium apparel brands. This technological integration is central to its objective of increasing its share in the export market, where consistency and quality certification remain the primary barriers to entry. As the firm navigates a dynamic trade environment, its focus remains on leveraging domestic supply chain advantages to maintain its trajectory in the current fiscal cycle, ensuring it remains well-positioned to capitalize on the ongoing recovery in consumer discretionary spending.
Specialist in synthetic and blended yarns
Lambodhara Textiles is an Indian manufacturer specializing in high-quality synthetic and blended yarns, including slub and specialty varieties. Serving domestic and international apparel markets, the company focuses on continuous technological upgrades to enhance quality. It maintains a stable financial performance, historically navigating market cycles through proactive yarn innovation.
How India’s textile recycling network is becoming a global ESG blueprint

India’s textile industry is mounting an aggressive defence against growing international criticism that developing economies are becoming dumping grounds for discarded Western fashion. Backed by fresh data from the Ministry of Textiles, India is now positioning itself not as a passive recipient of global waste, but as one of the world’s most advanced circular textile economies.
What has led to this narrative is a striking statistic: nearly 97 per cent of India’s pre-consumer textile waste, factory scraps, yarn remnants, and garment offcuts is now recycled back into the manufacturing chain. The achievement underscores the scale and sophistication of India’s recycling ecosystem at a time when global apparel brands are under mounting pressure to meet ESG and circularity commitments. The Ministry estimates that India currently processes approximately 7.8 million tonnes of textile waste annually, making the country one of the largest textile recovery markets globally. Officials argue that the recycling network is rooted in India’s long-standing culture of reuse and repair, now increasingly supported by formal industrial systems and advanced recycling technologies.
Domestic waste drives the circular economy
An important element of the government’s response to global criticism is the composition of the waste stream itself. Contrary to popular perception, imported textile waste represents only a small fraction of the material processed in India.
Table: India’s annual textile waste composition
|
Source of waste |
Volume (approx.) |
Percentage share |
|
Domestic Generation |
7.02 mn tonnes |
90% |
|
Imported Material |
0.54 mn tonnes |
7% |
|
Total Managed Waste |
7.80 mn tonnes |
100% |
The figures indicate that India’s recycling industry is overwhelmingly dependent on domestic textile discard rather than foreign fast-fashion waste. This distinction has implications for the industry. By relying largely on locally generated textile waste, Indian recyclers are reducing exposure to global regulatory volatility, including tightening EU sustainability standards and cross-border waste movement restrictions. At the same time, domestic waste streams provide a reliable source of secondary raw materials for manufacturers increasingly catering to environmentally conscious global buyers.
Experts say this localized sourcing model also strengthens India’s competitiveness in sustainable apparel manufacturing, particularly as international brands seek traceable and low-carbon supply chains.
A Rs 22,000 cr circular business opportunity
India’s textile recycling is no longer viewed merely as a waste management operation. It has evolved into a significant industrial economy in its own right. According to the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI), the textile waste value chain currently generates around Rs 22,000 crore, or roughly $2.6 billion, in annual economic activity. The sector spans collection, sorting, shredding, fiber recovery, yarn production, and the manufacturing of recycled textile products. The environmental gains are becoming equally important in driving export competitiveness.
Research conducted by IIT Delhi shows that mechanical textile recycling substantially reduces environmental impact compared to virgin fiber production. The findings estimate greenhouse gas emissions can be reduced by as much as 40 per cent, while fossil fuel consumption falls by a similar margin. Water usage is also significantly lower than that required for both conventional and organic cotton cultivation. These stats are relevant for global retailers and sourcing companies facing investor scrutiny over carbon emissions, water consumption, and textile waste footprints.
For India’s exporters, the emergence of measurable sustainability benchmarks could create stronger positioning in premium international markets, particularly in the US and Europe, where procurement policies are becoming increasingly ESG-linked.
Panipat emerges as a circular manufacturing model
The industrial cluster of Panipat in Haryana remains the most visible symbol of India’s textile recycling transformation. Best known for low-cost shoddy yarn production, the city has evolved into a sophisticated circular manufacturing ecosystem. The region operates on an industrial symbiosis model in which discarded woolens and acrylic textiles are shredded into reusable fibers and respun into yarn for blankets, carpets, and home furnishing products.
The cluster demonstrates how recycling can move beyond environmental compliance to become a commercially viable manufacturing strategy. Imported post-consumer woolens entering the region are processed under regulated actual user licenses, ensuring materials are directly consumed by authorized industrial units rather than diverted into unregulated channels.
Government oversight has also intensified in recent years. Authorities say units operating within the cluster increasingly fall under the supervision of the National Green Tribunal (NGT), helping enforce stricter environmental norms and labor standards. This transition from informal operations toward organized industrial structures is critical for India’s ambitions to become a trusted sustainable sourcing destination for global fashion brands.
Automation shape the next growth phase
While India’s recycling market has scaled rapidly, challenges remain around post-consumer waste segregation, labor formalization, and worker safety. However, the industry is entering a new phase driven by technology adoption and institutional formalization. Automated sorting systems, sensor-based fiber identification tools, and improved traceability mechanisms are beginning to replace labor-intensive manual segregation processes.
These technologies improve fiber purity and consistency, two factors increasingly essential for producing high-value recycled textiles suitable for global apparel brands. The next growth phase is expected to focus less on low-value recycling and more on upcycling, the conversion of textile waste into premium fashion, technical textiles, and performance materials with stronger margins.
This transition aligns closely with India’s broader textile ambitions. The country, already one of the world’s largest producers of cotton and synthetic textiles, is targeting a textile and apparel market size of $250 billion by 2030. As global supply chains recalibrate around sustainability, India’s ability to combine manufacturing scale with circular production capabilities may become a defining competitive advantage. Rather than functioning as a dumping ground for fast fashion, India is increasingly presenting itself as a critical node in the global circular economy, one capable of turning textile waste into industrial value, export competitiveness, and long-term ESG credibility.











