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The technological landscape of the Asian textile sector is shifting toward a fully automated model as Jeanologia introduces its integrated finishing suite at Indo Intertex 2026. By merging the ‘Billy’ artificial intelligence system with high-speed laser technology and G2 ozone treatments, the Spanish firm is moving beyond simple hardware to a data-driven production ecosystem. This integration allows manufacturers to bypass traditional, labor-intensive methods - such as hand-sanding and chemical stone washing - in favor of a digital workflow that ensures consistent quality across industrial scales. The ‘Compact Super’ laser system, a centerpiece of this rollout, demonstrates how localized wear and complex vintage patterns can now be executed with mathematical precision, effectively removing human error from the finishing process.

Atmospheric ozone technology challenges traditional water consumption

A critical component of this industrial pivot is the transition from water-based processing to atmospheric finishing. The Atmos process, utilizing G2 ozone technology, leverages air as a natural oxidizing agent to adjust indigo tones and create abrasion effects without the environmental toll of toxic chemicals or pumice stones. This shift is a core pillar of the "Mission Zero" initiative, which seeks to decouple textile growth from resource depletion. As the Asia-Pacific region solidifies its role as the global axis of garment exports, the adoption of these waterless solutions is becoming a prerequisite for international trade. This strategy reflects a broader market reality where profitability is increasingly linked to traceability and the elimination of hazardous discharge within the global supply chain.

  

FW Big Story The 11 bn deadlock can Europes textile recycling catch up

 

Europe is at a tipping point. Fast fashion consumption, led by rising incomes and a growing global middle class, has outpaced the continent’s ability to manage its textile waste. A landmark report by ReHubs and the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) warns of a looming textile circularity gap, projecting post-consumer textile waste to jump 36 per cent in the next decade, from 13.3 million tonnes in 2025 to 18.1 million tonnes by 2035, a volume enough to fill roughly 80 football stadiums every year. Yet, the system is failing: just 11 per cent of waste is collected and sorted, and less than 1 per cent is recycled back into new clothing.

The deadlock, as recycling isn’t scaling

BCG and ReHubs highlight a stark economic deadlock. Textile-to-textile (T2T) recycling is technically feasible but financially unviable at industrial scale. Standalone recyclers face deeply negative EBIT margins, a challenge exacerbated by high processing costs and inconsistent feedstock. Nearly half of post-consumer textiles end up in black bins, too contaminated for recovery.

Table: The profit gap (As-Is vs. T2T 2035 scenario)

Stakeholder group

To reach (volume)

One-off CAPEX

Recurring OPEX

As-is EBIT

T2T EBIT

Collectors

8.0 Mt

€300M

€900M–€1.2B

0–5%

0–5%

Sorters

5.1 Mt

€300M–€450M

€500M–€850M

3–5%

-5 to 0%

Pre-processors

3.1 Mt

€600M–€850M

€550M–€750M

5–10%

4–8%

Recyclers (Polyester)

1.1 Mt

€5B–€7.5B

€1B–€1.3B

N/A

-75 to -25%

Recyclers (Cotton)

1.6 Mt

€2B–€2.2B

€2B–€2.5B

N/A

-100 to -50%

The numbers underscore the challenge: while collection and pre-processing are manageable, full-scale recycling, especially polyester and cotton remains financially untenable without major structural support.

The €11 bn blueprint for 2035

Closing the circularity gap requires a combined investment of €8-11 billion in one-off CAPEX and €5-6.5 billion in annual OPEX. Achieving a 15 per cent recycling rate demands a radical reengineering of the value chain: collection must rise from 33 to 50 per cent, sorting from 36 to 63 per cent, and sorters must manage a changing fiber mix dominated by polyester, cotton, and polycotton (79 per cent of addressable molecules).

Performance varies widely across EU member states, reflecting differing regulatory and operational frameworks. The Netherlands, a reference case, enforces binding Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) rules, ensuring 97 per cent of collected textiles are sorted and banning landfill and incineration of collected clothing. Germany, despite high collection (65 per cent), only converts 24 per cent into qualified sorted volumes, with much exported or downgraded. France, using the Refashion EPR system with eco-modulation, sorts 76 per cent of collected textiles but still captures just a third of total post-consumer waste.

Reducing virgin oil dependence

Beyond waste management, T2T recycling offers industrial benefits. Synthetic textile production and cotton farming rely heavily on virgin oil and pesticides. Scaling T2T to 2.7 Mt could prevent 2-3 Mt of CO2e emissions, roughly twice the annual output of a city like The Hague.

Table: Levers to unlock scale

Segment

The deadlock

Scaling levers

Collection

High contamination in black bins

Mandatory separate collection; store take-backs.

Sorting

High labor/equipment costs

EPR-funded floor prices; portable scanning tech.

Recycling

Negative profitability; high CAPEX

CAPEX grants; public risk-sharing; price premiums.

Brands

Low margins; support for status quo

Recycled content mandates; eco-modulated fees.

Scaling the system hinges on brand participation. Current margins cannot absorb the 2.5× higher cost of T2T fibers compared to virgin options. Analysts predict that end consumers will indirectly shoulder the cost, adding roughly 60 cents to a €10 t-shirt. Europe’s textile circularity challenge is thus both a financial and strategic reckoning. Bridging the €11 billion gap could transform an environmental liability into a sustainable industrial advantage, but the clock is ticking.

  

The global landscape for compression and shapewear is undergoing a fundamental shift as manufacturers integrate advanced sensory technology into everyday garments. According to the latest data from Textiles Intelligence, the convergence of medical necessity and athletic performance is fuelling robust market expansion. This evolution is most evident in the development of "smart" garments equipped with biometric sensors. In the medical sector, these innovations allow healthcare providers to monitor patient recovery remotely; meanwhile, in the athletic arena, they offer enthusiasts real-time data on physiological performance. This transition from passive support to active digital monitoring marks a significant pivot in how modern consumers value functional textiles.

Regional shifts and demographic diversification fuel market reach

Beyond technological integration, the market is benefiting from a broadening consumer base, particularly within the Asia-Pacific and Middle East regions, where athletic participation is on a steep upward trajectory. This geographic growth is mirrored by a demographic shift toward female consumers engaging in high-intensity strength training and distance running. Furthermore, the industry is responding to the dual pressures of an aging global population requiring medical therapy and a younger generation influenced by celebrity-driven aesthetic standards. As "selfie culture" intensifies the focus on physical appearance, the lines between medical utility, athletic performance, and high-fashion shapewear continue to blur, creating a unified market for streamlined, high-performance silhouettes.

  

The denim industry is undergoing a significant technical transition as Jeanologia introduces ‘Billy,’ an artificial intelligence platform designed to bridge the gap between creative inspiration and industrial execution. Unveiled at Kingpins Amsterdam, this technology allows designers to convert high-resolution images of vintage garments into production-ready laser files in a matter of minutes. By automating the extraction of wear patterns and time-aged fades, the system replaces hours of manual technical adjustments with a streamlined digital workflow. This shift enables manufacturers to replicate the complex character of heritage denim with mathematical precision, ensuring the final laser-etched product remains faithful to the original source material without requiring traditional, labor-intensive retouching.

Sustainable engineering replaces manual finishing processes

This move toward digital replication is anchored by the ‘Future Vintage’ initiative - a strategy that pairs AI design with eco-efficient finishing technologies. By synchronizing the Billy AI platform with G2 ozone and atmospheric processes, Jeanologia is effectively removing the variability and environmental overhead typically associated with manual denim distressing. This integrated model not only preserves the aesthetic integrity of iconic archival pieces but also significantly reduces the consumption of water and chemicals. Furthermore, through collaborations such as the "From Essentials to Specials" collection with Sartex, the industry is moving toward a future where digital printing and laser technology serve as the primary languages of design, allowing for complex, expressive finishes that are both reproducible and consistent across global supply chains.

  

Leeds-based Fibre Extrusion Technology (FET) has been named the recipient of the Techtextil 2026 New Production Technology Innovation Award, recognized for its pioneering FET-500 series. This small-scale gel spinning system effectively eliminates the use of toxic solvents—such as hexane and dichloromethane—traditionally required for the production of Ultra-High Molecular Weight Polyethylene (UHMWPE). By utilizing supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO2) as a non-toxic extraction medium, FET has addressed a long-standing environmental bottleneck in the manufacture of high-tenacity fibers, which are up to 15 times stronger than steel.

Agile R&D and biomedical integration

The introduction of the FET-500 marks a shift toward bespoke, low-volume fiber production, a sector previously hampered by massive, inflexible industrial lines. ‘Techtextil 2026 is the first global platform where we are presenting this commercial-phase technology,’ states Richard Slack, Managing Director. The system is particularly impactful for the biomedical and defense sectors, enabling the forensic development of specialized sutures and body armor. By facilitating the processing of over 130 different polymer types in a compact footprint, the machinery allows research teams to replicate complex industrial processes with minimal material waste.

Market resilience and strategic growth

The award comes as the global extrusion machinery market is projected to reach $9.88 billion in 2026, driven by a 4.5 per cent CAGR. FET’s focus on sustainable, lab-scale equipment positions it at the forefront of this expansion, particularly as manufacturers seek to comply with tightening global chemical regulations. As the British Textile Machinery Association (BTMA) celebrates this milestone, FET continues to leverage its Leeds-based Fibre Development Centre to support international clients in transitioning toward resource-efficient, high-value technical textile production.

FET is a leading UK-based manufacturer of laboratory and pilot-scale melt, wet, and gel spinning systems. Serving the biomedical, aerospace, and high-performance apparel markets, the company specializes in equipment for difficult-to-process polymers. With an active presence in over 35 countries, FET’s 2026 strategy focuses on sustainable ‘plug-and-play’ extrusion solutions.

  

At the Techtextil 2026 exhibition in Frankfurt, Archroma unveiled its latest advancements in chemical auxiliaries, centering on the elimination of ‘forever chemicals’ without compromising industrial durability. The standout debut, Phobotex NTR-50 LIQ, represents a significant leap in non-PFAS durable water repellency, utilizing a partially bio-based profile to meet the extreme demands of the outdoor and activewear segments. As the industry grapples with tightening EU and US environmental regulations, this solution offers a verifiable performance bridge, ensuring fabrics retain high-grade functionality across natural and synthetic fibers.

Cross-sector integration and performance fastness

The showcase underscored Archroma’s strategy of horizontal application, extending high-performance coloration to protective workwear and automotive interiors. New reactive and acid ink systems, such as Novacron Advance, were demonstrated to deliver superior coloristic performance on polyamide and blends. In the protective wear sector, the introduction of Nylofixan PA LIQ C addresses the critical need for phenolic-free fastness, ensuring garments withstand rigorous industrial laundering. This approach is reinforced by a new partnership with HeiQ, integrating antimicrobial and plant-based odor-control technologies into Archroma's global application network.

Fiscal recovery and productivity optimization

These innovations arrive as Archroma targets a fiscal rebound, with S&P Global forecasting a revenue increase to approximately $1.7 billion for 2026. By deploying the Super Systems + platform, the company is assisting mills in optimizing resource consumption from sizing to finishing. Mills are currently squeezed between stringent sustainability mandates and rising costs; our goal is to provide cleaner chemistries that simultaneously improve productivity, states Dhirendra Gautam, Vice President - Commercial. This focus on end-to-end efficiency is vital as the global technical textile market is projected to reach $702.97 billion by 2026-end.

Archroma is a global specialty chemicals leader providing mission-critical solutions for the textile, paper, and emulsions sectors. Primarily serving key manufacturing hubs in Asia and Europe, the firm focuses on circularity and resource-efficient dyeing systems. Following its 2023 acquisition of Huntsman Textile Effects, Archroma is aggressively scaling its bio-waste-based EarthColors® technology.

  

The Japanese design house Issey Miyake is significantly intensifying its North American footprint, relocating its New York flagship to a prestigious Beaux-Arts landmark in the NoMad district. Opening May 2026, the new location at the New York Life Building marks a departure from its long-standing TriBeCa home, signaling a broader retail trend of luxury houses gravitating toward midtown’s high-net-worth residential corridors. This 2,500-sq-ft bi-level space integrates historic bronze-framed windows with a modern, transparent central staircase designed by SO-IL, emphasizing the brand's commitment to architectural innovation alongside its signature technical textiles.

Strategic retail experience and market positioning

As global luxury retail navigates a volatile fiscal landscape, Issey Miyake’s 2026 strategy prioritizes the ‘experience economy’ through the debut of Mado, its first US in-store gallery. This initiative transforms the traditional retail floor into a cultural hub for art and design collaborations. Despite a challenging 2025 for online luxury transactions, current data forecasts a 5-10 per cent revenue recovery for the brand in 2026, driven by exclusive high-margin launches including limited-edition hand-carved jackets. By consolidating its menswear and womenswear under one landmark roof, the brand is streamlining operations to capture a projected 4% uptick in domestic luxury consumption.

Cultural continuity and operational efficiency

The relocation reflects a calculated move to capitalize on the ‘NoMad effect,’ where luxury brands are seeing higher foot traffic compared to traditional downtown shopping districts. The Madison Avenue flagship is a framework for ideas, merging our material innovation with New York’s historical grandeur, noted a brand representative regarding the opening. This flagship serves as a cornerstone for the company's 2026 objective of achieving greater structural efficiency while maintaining the artisanal heritage established by its founder in 1971.

Issey Miyake Inc is an avant-garde fashion house specializing in ‘Pleats Please’ technology and architectural apparel. Dominating markets in Japan, Paris, and New York, the brand anticipates 10 per cent growth in 2026 through lifestyle-centric retail. Since its 1971 debut, the house has pioneered the fusion of technology and traditional craftsmanship.

  

The luxury apparel and accessories sector is navigating a complex operational environment as ongoing Middle East hostilities disrupt high-margin travel corridors. Recent fiscal disclosures for the Q1, FY26 highlight a significant contraction in the ‘golden triangle’ of airport retail, particularly for textile-heavy segments like silk ready-to-wear and premium leather goods. LVMH reported that regional tensions shaved approximately 1per cent off group organic growth, while its fashion and leather goods division saw its first quarterly decline in years. This downturn is attributed to a 65 per cent peak in flight cancellations at major Gulf hubs, which are critical nodes for the $74 billion global travel-retail industry.

Supply chain fragility and revenue calibration

The conflict has exposed the vulnerability of luxury conglomerates that rely on duty-free channels to offset sluggish demand in traditional European and Chinese markets. Kering’s flagship brand, Gucci, experienced an 8 per cent drop in quarterly revenue, a decline exacerbated by the curtailment of international shopping trips by affluent Gulf travelers. We are seeing a direct correlation between airport footfall and the sell-through of high-seasonal apparel, noted Cecile Cabanis, Chief Financial Officer, LVMH during a recent analyst call. In response, brands are reallocating inventory toward domestic flagships in the United States and Japan, where local demand remains resilient, to mitigate the regional shortfall.

Strategic realignment in high-net-worth corridors

Despite immediate headwinds, the broader outlook for 2026 suggests a pivot toward ‘experience-led’ luxury ecosystems. While personal luxury goods have faced marginal declines, experiential luxury - including high-end hospitality and bespoke wardrobe services - grew by 8 per cent to reach $103.4 billion. A brief case study of the UAE market shows, while airport sales dipped, domestic mall-anchored retail remained buoyant, supported by a 4-6 per cent growth forecast for the region’s luxury sector. This trend is driving retailers like Majid Al Futtaim to accelerate the opening of over 30 new luxury boutiques this year, focusing on underserved corridors in Riyadh and Jeddah to capture local wealth that is currently staying closer to home.

LVMH and Kering manage diversified portfolios across premium apparel, leather goods, and high-performance textiles. They dominate key markets in Europe, Asia, and North America. Their growth plans for 2026 prioritize AI-enabled supply chain efficiency and expansion into lifestyle-centric retail. Historically, these groups have leveraged high-margin travel retail to sustain double-digit growth, though current volatility has forced a shift toward domestic flagship investment.

  

A flagship in the global textile value chain, Sangam India has finalized a strategic power purchase agreement (PPA) with CleanMax Enviro Energy Solutions to supply 50 MW of hybrid renewable energy to its Rajasthan manufacturing clusters. Unlike traditional intermittent solar projects, this installation combines 30 MWp of solar and 20 MW of wind capacity, integrated with a 2 MWh Battery Energy Storage System (BESS). This technical configuration ensures a stable, round-the-clock power supply for five key textile facilities effectively mitigating the energy volatility that often disrupts high-precision spinning and weaving processes.

Financial resilience amidst energy cost inflation

The transition to a ‘group captive’ energy model serves as a vital fiscal hedge against rising grid tariffs and 4.7 per cent fluctuations in industrial power costs. By leveraging the Rajasthan Green Energy Open Access Regulations 2025, Sangam is projected to achieve annual energy savings exceeding Rs 10 crore (approximately $1.2 million). Operations and sustainability must move in tandem for a manufacturing-led business, stated SR Dakhera, CFO, Sangam India. This move is critical as the company targets a revenue milestone of Rs 4,000 crore by 2026 -end, driven largely by a shift toward higher-margin seamless wear and technical denim.

Scaling sustainable infrastructure for export compliance

The integration of renewable power aligns with the broader sector's need to meet tightening global ESG standards, including the EU’s upcoming Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM). By augmenting its existing 22 MW renewable portfolio with this hybrid project, Sangam is positioning itself as a low-carbon preferred supplier for North American and European retailers. This infrastructure upgrade complements the firm's recent expansion into recycled polyester fiber - now producing 45 metric tons per day from PET flakes - creating a vertically integrated, circular manufacturing ecosystem that insulates the balance sheet from raw material and energy price shocks.

Based in Bhilwara, Sangam India is a leading vertically integrated textile manufacturer specializing in PV yarn, denim, and seamless activewear. Operating six world-class facilities, the group exports to over 50 countries. The firm is currently executing a CAPEX-heavy expansion to reach Rs 4,000 crore in revenue by FY2026, supported by a recent 39.3 per cent growth in EBITDA and a strategic pivot toward sustainable, high-value branded apparel.

  

Projected to reach $24.2 billion by late 2026, the global denim sector is witnessing a decisive move toward ‘heritage technicality.’ At Kingpins Amsterdam this week, The Lycra Company transitioned from its pilot phase to the official global rollout of Lycra VintageFX fiber. This proprietary dual-core technology specifically targets the industry’s shift toward loose, ‘away-from-the-body’ silhouettes - such as barrel legs and boyfriend cuts - which traditionally relied on rigid, non-stretch fabrics. By integrating a heat-sensitive component that controls elastic extension during finishing, the fiber enables mills to achieve an authentic 1990s aesthetic without the structural instability or ‘bagging’ common in low-stretch textiles.

Commercial adoption and operational scalability

Market intelligence indicates, performance-oriented stretch fabrics now constitute 38 per cent of global denim production, driven by a 22 per cent growth in demand for lightweight, high-recovery materials. Leading the commercial vanguard, Jack & Jones recently debuted the first-ever capsule collection utilizing VintageFX in the Chinese market, spanning four distinct silhouettes from distressed dark gray to stone-washed styles. This adoption highlights the fiber’s ‘drop-in’ compatibility; it requires no significant machinery modifications, allowing manufacturers to maintain operational efficiency while meeting the 69 per cent of consumers who cite ‘freedom of movement’ as their primary purchase driver.

Strategic resilience amidst sector shifting

Despite broader macroeconomic pressures and fluctuating raw material costs, the textile leader is focusing on high-margin, patent-pending innovations to fortify its market position. The integration of VintageFX alongside Renewable Lycra fiber - which utilizes 70 per cent plant-based content - reflects a dual strategy of aesthetic relevance and environmental compliance. As B2B procurement contracts increasingly hinge on durability and traceable performance metrics, these technical advancements serve as a critical buffer, transforming traditional denim manufacturing into a high-precision, value-added enterprise.

Technological leadership and global footprint

Headquartered in Delaware, The Lycra Company specializes in advanced fiber and technology solutions for the global apparel and personal care industries. As the pioneer of spandex, it maintains a dominant presence in the premium denim and activewear segments. The company is currently executing a growth strategy centered on its Planet Agenda sustainability platform, prioritizing bio-derived materials and circularity to navigate evolving regulatory landscapes and enhance long-term financial stability.

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