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Mos Mosh transitions toward multi-brand retail with new store launch
Danish fashion powerhouse Mos Mosh has unveiled its premier flagship store in Copenhagen, marking a definitive step in its transition toward a multi-brand retail architecture. Located at Sværtegade 10, the new destination serves as a physical manifestation of the brand's dual identity, housing both the signature Mos Mosh women’s line and the more technical, contemporary MM02 collection. By centralizing these distinct yet complementary aesthetics—where heritage tailoring meets ‘La Belle Botanique’ floral innovation - the brand is optimizing its footprint to capture a broader premium market share. This retail strategy aligns with the 2026 industry shift toward ‘experience hubs,’ moving beyond mere transactions to offer curated brand universes that prioritize tactile product engagement.
Driving growth through functional luxury
The flagship opening comes as the premium European apparel sector faces increased scrutiny regarding product longevity and material transparency. Mos Mosh is responding by leaning into ‘Countryside Refinement,’ a trend emphasizing heritage checks and high-performance denim that balances feminine silhouettes with functional workwear. Data from the 2026 fashion outlook suggests, 74 per cent of consumers are now willing to pay a premium for fully traceable, high-durability items. In response, Mos Mosh is utilizing this flagship to showcase its ‘Heart Sport’ and technical outerwear lines, effectively diversifying its revenue streams beyond its traditional denim core. Industry analysts anticipate this consolidation will boost the brand's resilience in a cautious retail climate, leveraging a 2.1 per cent uptick in regional luxury exports.
Scaling the global ‘Quiet Luxury’ footprint
The Copenhagen launch is the cornerstone of an aggressive 2026–2027 expansion roadmap targeting key European fashion capitals. By integrating digital product passports and AI-enhanced styling services directly onto the shop floor, Mos Mosh is bridging the gap between high-intent online research and physical conversion. As Copenhagen Fashion Week continues to set the global standard for ethical practices, the brand’s focus on recycled materials and ‘Crafted Romance’ positioning ensures it remains competitive in an eco-conscious marketplace. This strategic physical presence is expected to drive a projected 15 per cent increase in brand equity as the company matures from a wholesale-heavy model to a direct-to-consumer leader.
Founded in 2010 with a focus on perfectly fitted denim, Mos Mosh is a Danish fashion house that has expanded into a global premium lifestyle brand. Specializing in luxury tailoring and ‘chic with an edge’ apparel, it now operates in over 2,000 boutiques worldwide. Its growth strategy centers on the ‘dual-brand’ synergy between Mos Mosh and MM02, aiming for sustained double-digit growth in the North European and Mediterranean markets through 2027.
Australia’s performance apparel sector embraces enzymatic circularity
Australian activewear label LSKD has secured a decade-long supply of enzymatically recycled nylon 6.6 through a strategic partnership with biotech innovator Samsara Eco. Under this ten-year agreement, LSKD will transition core product lines from standard nylon 6 to regenerated nylon 6.6 starting in 2028. This move addresses the ‘performance-sustainability trade-off’ traditionally seen in recycled synthetics. Nylon 6.6 is preferred in technical apparel for its superior tensile strength and thermal stability, yet its high-quality recycling has historically been a bottleneck. By utilizing AI-designed enzymes to break down end-of-life textiles into virgin-identical monomers, this collaboration bypasses the degradation typical of mechanical recycling.
Scaling solutions in a growing market
This commitment comes as the Australian activewear market is projected to expand significantly, reaching an estimated $13.2 billion by 2034. For LSKD, which has scaled rapidly from a $1.6 million turnover in 2019 to a global operation, securing recycled feedstock is a defensive move against rising raw material costs. Samsara Eco’s technology is particularly disruptive because it can process mixed-fiber blends - a major challenge for the 92 million tonnes of textile waste generated annually. With a first-of-its-kind nylon 6.6 plant scheduled to open in Asia by 2028, the partnership signals that circular materials have moved from laboratory pilots to mission-critical industrial components.
Reshaping global textile standards
The broader textile sector is watching this ‘Australian model’ closely. Following a similar ten-year deal with Lululemon, Samsara Eco is positioning enzymatic recycling as the industry standard for closed-loop synthetics. As brands prepare for stricter global environmental regulations, such as the EU’s ecodesign mandates, the ability to endlessly recycle performance fibers without loss of quality becomes a vital competitive advantage. This partnership reflects a shift where circularity is no longer a marketing niche but a core operational strategy designed to future-proof supply chains against both resource scarcity and legislative pressure.
LSKD is a high-growth Australian athletic apparel brand specializing in functional activewear and streetwear for the global CrossFit and fitness communities. Operating a direct-to-consumer model across 200,000 customers, the brand focuses on premium performance materials. LSKD plans to reach 100 per cent sustainable materials in its core collections by 2030.
New ICAC financial framework to integrate global cotton producers into carbon market
The International Cotton Advisory Committee (ICAC) has unveiled a transformative financial framework aimed at integrating global cotton producers into the multi-billion-dollar voluntary carbon market. Moving beyond traditional yield-based revenue, this initiative provides a mechanism for farmers to secure up to $200 per hectare in supplemental income by adopting regenerative agricultural practices. As the textile industry faces intensifying pressure from the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), this program offers a transparent, data-backed solution for brands to de-risk their upstream supply chains. By utilizing biochar application and rigorous soil-health monitoring, the project converts sequestered atmospheric carbon into tradeable assets, directly addressing the fiscal gap in sustainable fiber production.
Operationalizing climate resilience through MRV systems
To ensure market-grade integrity, ICAC has formalized a strategic partnership with Merago Inc. to deploy a sophisticated Monitoring, Reporting, and Verification (MRV) infrastructure. This system is critical for textile manufacturers requiring certified ‘Scope 3’ emission reductions to meet their net-zero targets. A pilot program in Uzbekistan has already demonstrated the viability of this model, proving that scientific rigor can coexist with smallholder farming operations. The integration of carbon credits into the cotton value chain is no longer a theoretical exercise but a commercial necessity, stated a lead upstream project consultant. This framework provides the traceability and financial incentives required to scale climate-smart agriculture across the global South, where the majority of the world's apparel fiber originates.
Aligning global supply chains with carbon compliance
The move comes at a pivotal time as major manufacturing hubs, including India, expand their domestic carbon credit trading schemes to encompass large-scale textile mills and spinning units. By 2026, the convergence of farm-level carbon sequestration and industrial emission caps is expected to create a unified marketplace for green credits. This systemic shift allows apparel brands to claim authentic environmental stewardship while providing a necessary financial cushion for growers against volatile market prices. The ICAC initiative serves as a blueprint for a circular economy, where environmental restoration is incentivized as a premium product attribute, fundamentally altering the cost structures of the global apparel trade.
International Cotton Advisory Committee
Established in 1939, the ICAC is a Washington-based intergovernmental body focused on stabilizing the global cotton economy through technical transparency and policy coordination. Representing major producing and consuming nations, it currently leads the transition toward regenerative fiber sourcing and carbon-neutral supply chains to bolster long-term industrial profitability.
India strategizes duty rationalization to fortify textile export resilience
In coordination with the Department of Revenue and the Ministry of Agriculture, the Ministry of Textiles is currently evaluating a strategic reduction or total elimination of the 11 per cent import duty on raw cotton. This fiscal review follows the reinstatement of the 5 per cent Basic Customs Duty and 5 per cent Agriculture Infrastructure and Development Cess on January 1, 2026. Industry stakeholders, including the Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI), argue, this levy creates an inverted duty structure, particularly impacting the high-end garment segment. With domestic cotton prices trending 10 per cent to 12 per cent higher than international benchmarks in early 2026, manufacturers face significant margin erosion while competing against zero-duty regimes in nations like Bangladesh and Vietnam.
Securing the $100 billion export roadmap
This policy deliberation is central to India’s ‘Vision 2030,’ which targets $100 billion in apparel exports. Despite logistical headwinds, the sector demonstrated resilience in FY 2025–26, with total textile exports rising 2.1 per cent to Rs 316,334.9 crore. However, the reliance on Extra-Long Staple (ELS) cotton - of which India has a domestic deficit - necessitates duty-free access to maintain the quality required for premium EU and US markets. A senior textile analyst noted, the elimination of this fiscal barrier is an operational prerequisite to stabilizing yarn prices and securing high-value global orders.
Balancing agrarian interests and industrial scale
While exporters push for liberalization, the government must balance these demands with the interests of nearly six million cotton farmers. Current estimates indicate growers are holding approximately 4 million bales in anticipation of firmer prices. A sudden influx of cheaper imports could potentially depress domestic realizations below the Minimum Support Price (MSP). To mitigate this, officials are discussing a ‘lean season’ exemption, providing a window for duty-free imports during periods of low domestic arrival. This targeted approach aims to fuel the productivity of the newly announced Mega Textile Parks without destabilizing the rural economy.
The Indian textile industry is the nation’s second-largest employer, spanning the entire value chain from fiber to high-fashion retail. Predominantly focused on cotton and man-made fiber (MMF) segments, the sector is currently undergoing a structural shift toward technical textiles and large-scale manufacturing via the PM MITRA scheme. Having transitioned from a fragmented traditional base to a globally integrated powerhouse, the industry now targets a 300% growth in export turnover by 2030, supported by newly ratified Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) with the UK and EU.
Britain’s Forgotten Growth Engine: Why policy gaps are undermining fashion and textiles

Britain’s fashion and textile industry, often framed through the lens of creativity and design, is emerging as a case study in policy neglect despite its outsized economic contribution. A new report, ‘Policy Fragmentation and Place-Based Opportunity in UK Fashion and Textiles’, by Tamara Cincik and Alix Coombs, argues that the sector’s challenges stem less from market weakness than from fragmented governance that has left it stranded between industrial and creative policy silos.
At the heart of the report lies a paradox. While the UK’s 2025 Industrial Strategy names creative industries among its priority growth sectors, fashion manufacturing remains largely excluded from that policy architecture. Yet the numbers suggest a sector far too significant to be treated as peripheral. Fashion and textiles contribute £62 billion in gross value added, support one in every 25 UK jobs, and generate £23 billion in tax revenues. Manufacturing alone accounts for 303,000 jobs and £15.6 billion in GVA, underlining that production, not just design, remains a material part of the sector’s economic weight.
Growth without industrial recognition
The report contends that this economic heft has not translated into institutional support. At the national level, fashion is typically recognized as an intellectual property-driven creative industry, while manufacturing support gravitates toward capital-heavy sectors such as automotive and aerospace. The result is a policy vacuum where apparel production receives limited strategic attention despite mounting geopolitical concerns over supply resilience and domestic sourcing.
That disconnect is now manifesting in operating stress. One of the report’s starkest findings is the ‘speed trap’ confronting UK manufacturers. Brands increasingly demand eight-week production turnarounds, while base cloth sourcing can take up to sixteen weeks, exposing the mismatch between commercial expectations and industrial realities. For many suppliers, this has become a structural profitability squeeze rather than a cyclical disruption.
The pressure is visible in company-level performance. SME and micro fashion businesses recorded an average one-third decline in sales revenues in the final quarter of 2024, highlighting fragility at the base of the value chain. The report links this not only to volatile demand, but to asymmetrical buyer power that has left smaller manufacturers absorbing disproportionate commercial risk.
Regional clusters as economic infrastructure
Rather than viewing manufacturing as a standalone activity, the report reframes it as anchor infrastructure supporting regional ecosystems that extend into logistics, maintenance, repair services and vocational training. This place-based framing becomes particularly visible in Leicester, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
Leicester, once home to around 1,000 factories in 2020, has become a cautionary example of industrial erosion. The decline of the sector has been accompanied by social fallout, including rising food bank use and fuel poverty among former garment workers, illustrating how manufacturing decline can trigger broader community instability.
Scotland offers a more contrast. Its textiles and leather sector is targeting £1.5 billion in turnover and 13,000 employees by 2030, supported by a more coordinated regional development approach. Northern Ireland presents an even broader industrial interpretation, positioning textiles not merely as apparel production but as part of advanced manufacturing linked to aerospace, automotive and clean energy.
Together, these case studies reinforce the report’s argument that fashion manufacturing should be understood as economic infrastructure, not a legacy sector.
Procurement as an untapped growth lever
Perhaps the report’s most striking argument centers on public procurement as an overlooked industrial tool. Unlike subsidy-heavy interventions, procurement offers demand stability, something many manufacturers cite as their most pressing need. The report points to defence as a major missed opportunity. As Britain moves toward defence spending equivalent to 5 per cent of GDP by 2035, investment discussions remain dominated by weapons systems and artificial intelligence, with little recognition of textile-linked opportunities in uniforms, technical fabrics and protective equipment.
Evidence from pandemic-era PPE contracts offers a compelling counterpoint. One manufacturer cited in the report described public contracts during Covid as the most commercially stable period the business had ever experienced. That finding strengthens the report’s proposal for procurement-led pilots in uniforms and workwear tied to local sourcing and accredited labour standards.
Europe’s contrasting examples
International comparisons sharpen the critique. Italy and France, the report notes, treat textiles as a strategic industrial asset rather than a residual sector. Italy’s textile market, valued at $26.9 billion in 2024, has been supported by €250 million in coordinated state intervention specifically targeting the fashion-textile ecosystem.
France has moved even more aggressively through the €100 billion France Relance programme, aimed at transforming domestic production models. The report highlights a particularly revealing benchmark: Made in France goods capture up to 84 per cent of value created, compared with just 35 per cent for imports. The implication is clear: industrial policy can materially influence domestic value retention. For Britain, these examples expose not just a competitiveness gap but a philosophical difference in how strategic manufacturing is understood.
Toward a new industrial framework
The report’s proposed ‘Sustainable Garment Transformation Framework’ seeks to bridge that divide by aligning industrial, environmental and social policy. Its central proposition is that fashion and textiles should be formally recognized within industrial strategy as a hybrid sector spanning creative innovation and manufacturing capability.
That hybrid framing could prove decisive as Britain grapples with productivity, regional inequality and supply chain resilience. The economic case, as the report makes clear through both national metrics and regional evidence, is already established. The policy challenge is whether Westminster moves from rhetorical support for reshoring to instruments capable of making it viable.
For a sector contributing £62 billion while supporting millions across intertwined supply chains, the bigger question may no longer be whether fashion and textiles deserve industrial strategy status, but whether the UK can afford the costs of continuing without one.
Beyond price rallies structural reform can strengthen India’s cotton economy

India’s cotton economy is entering a decisive phase, where firmer prices and tighter arrivals in the 2026-27 season have given temporary optimism, even as they expose deeper vulnerabilities in the value chain. The emerging consensus across the industry is that higher prices alone do not constitute resilience. Instead, the debate is shifting toward what sector stakeholders increasingly describe as competitive fibre security, a framework that treats quality reliability, contamination control and producer liquidity as central to export competitiveness, not peripheral concerns.
This evolution matters because India’s textile ambitions cannot be sustained by domestic fibre availability alone. In an increasingly discriminating global sourcing market, the competitiveness of cotton is determined as much by consistency and traceability as by acreage or output.
The farm liquidity deficit
One of the strongest distortions in the current market has been the disconnect between price recovery and farm-level realization. Many producers have been unable to participate in higher spot rates because they sold early in the season under financial pressure, illustrating how liquidity, rather than agronomic productivity, often determines value capture. That challenge is reflected in the barriers outlined below:
|
Barrier to holding stock |
Impact on the value chain |
|
Debt & Loan Repayment |
Immediate pressure to settle crop loans prevents holding for better rates. +1 |
|
Weak Storage Infrastructure |
Lack of access to certified rural warehousing leads to physical deterioration or forced sale. +3 |
|
Credit Constraints |
Absence of affordable post-harvest finance limits cash flow during the holding period. +3 |
|
Market Power Imbalance |
Value is transferred from producers to traders and intermediaries who possess liquidity. +1 |
The significance of these constraints extends beyond farmer incomes. They influence the very composition of supply entering the industrial chain. Distress-driven sales often compress quality decisions, making liquidity a competitiveness issue rather than merely a welfare concern. Negotiable Warehouse Receipt financing and low-cost post-harvest credit have therefore, moved from being niche interventions to strategic reforms. Their role is not simply to support farmers but to stabilize supply timing, improve procurement discipline and raise export confidence.
When farmer distress becomes fibre risk
The deeper concern for the textile industry is that producer vulnerability often translates directly into fibre vulnerability. Quality degradation is rarely accidental; it is often the economic outcome of stressed production systems. Industry assessments increasingly link farmer liquidity stress with four recurring technical deficiencies: higher contamination levels from compromised picking and handling practices; inconsistency in staple parameters that reduces buyer confidence; weaker moisture control due to inadequate storage; and persistent quality variation that undermines the preference positioning of Indian cotton in international markets.
These risks carry direct export consequences. In a global sourcing environment where mills and brands prioritise predictable fibre performance, contamination and inconsistency become commercial liabilities, often reflected in discounts or sourcing shifts. The argument emerging from the sector is clear: quality assurance begins not at the ginnery but at the farm gate.
Reforming the supply chain
That realization is driving a move away from temporary price-centric responses toward structural resilience. Three priorities have gained particular traction. First, financial innovation, particularly scaling warehouse-backed finance and expanding access to low-cost liquidity so farmers are not compelled to sell into distressed conditions.
Second, is the strengthening of aggregation models, especially Farmer Producer Organisations, which are increasingly seen as instruments not only for bargaining power but also for logistics, quality management and traceability. Third is a shift toward quality-linked procurement systems that reward superior fibre parameters rather than treating cotton as an undifferentiated commodity. Collectively, these reforms represent a move from viewing the producer as the weakest link to positioning the producer as the anchor of a competitive sourcing ecosystem.
This is also beginning to reshape mill and brand strategies. Rather than engaging only during scarcity-driven procurement cycles, there is growing emphasis on deeper farm-gate sourcing partnerships aimed at protecting fibre integrity from origin.
Global signals from World Cotton Day
That broader repositioning gained international reinforcement at World Cotton Day 2025 in Rome, where policymakers and trade leaders framed cotton not merely as an agricultural commodity but as a strategic development asset linking farming, manufacturing and creative industries. The discussions revolved around three interconnected themes:
Table: Framework for textile competitiveness
|
Strategic pillar |
Relevance to competitiveness |
Value addition |
|
Industrial Sophistication |
Moving beyond raw fiber exports toward stronger textile processing ecosystems |
Increases the complexity and market value of exports by shifting from primary goods to finished products. |
|
Regional Integration |
Strengthening cluster-based trade corridors and sourcing linkages |
Enhances supply chain efficiency and reduces lead times through localized synergy and infrastructure. |
|
Sustainable Development |
Positioning cotton as a driver of income security and trade stability |
Builds long-term resilience and aligns with global ESG standards to ensure market access and producer welfare. |
For India, these themes carry practical implications. Value addition aligns with efforts to raise textile export sophistication, while regional integration offers lessons for strengthening domestic cotton-to-textile corridors. Sustainable development, meanwhile, reinforces the argument that farm resilience and export competitiveness are increasingly inseparable.
CAI and the value chain shift
Within this transition, the Cotton Association of India is seeking to expand its role beyond market representation into value chain stewardship. Established in 1921, the institution’s emphasis on contamination-free cotton, grading discipline and modern aggregation reflects the sector’s larger focus. Its advocacy around export worthiness signals a notable shift in industry thinking. The objective is no longer simply securing adequate fibre supply, but ensuring that Indian cotton commands preference in increasingly demanding international markets. That distinction may define the next phase of sectoral growth.
From fibre security to competitive security
The central lesson emerging from the current cycle is that availability without competitiveness offers limited strategic protection. A resilient cotton economy cannot be built through price rallies alone, nor through supply sufficiency divorced from quality and liquidity fundamentals. Competitive fibre security reframes the challenge more holistically. It links farmer financing to fibre quality, sourcing systems to export credibility, and structural reform to long-term market positioning. For India’s cotton economy, that may prove the difference between remaining a volume supplier and becoming a globally preferred fibre origin.
H&M capitalizes on Brazilian consumer demand with strategic dual-store launch
The strategic inauguration of H&M’s first flagship in Rio de Janeiro alongside a new high-traffic outlet in Sorocaba marks a decisive phase in the Swedish retailer’s Brazilian market entry. On April 25, the Riosul Shopping Center debut attracted significant crowds, underscoring a high demand for the brand’s value-driven fashion model. This expansion occurs as the Brazilian apparel market seeks stabilization following inflationary pressures, with industry analysts forecasting the sector to reach a valuation of nearly $32 billion by 2031. By establishing a presence in both a coastal metropolis and a key industrial hub like Sorocaba, H&M is effectively targeting diverse socioeconomic segments to secure a resilient market share.
Operational scaling and regional competitive dynamics
The retail giant intends to scale its local footprint to approximately 70 physical locations, a move that places it in direct competition with entrenched regional players such as Lojas Renner and C&A Brazil. Success in this territory requires navigating complex logistical frameworks and a unique tax structure that has historically challenged international fashion groups. However, H&M’s integrated supply chain and digital-first approach offer a competitive advantage in a region where e-commerce penetration is rising at a 12 per cent annual rate. Market observers suggest that if H&M maintains its current momentum, its Brazilian operations could contribute significantly to the group’s target of doubling sales by 2030 while maintaining double-digit operating margins.
The H&M global retail framework
H&M operates as a premier global fashion retailer, offering diverse apparel across women’s, men’s, and children’s categories. With a focus on the European, American, and now expanding South American markets, the company plans to increase its physical and digital presence worldwide. Historically founded in Sweden in 1947, the group recently reported robust fiscal performance, aiming for continued profitability through sustainable sourcing and high-volume retail efficiency.
Gap Inc deepens eastern European footprint with tactical Romanian outlet entry
The recent inauguration of Gap’s first physical ‘Gap Outlet’ at the Fashion House Outlet Centre Militari signifies a sophisticated evolution of the brand’s distribution model within the Romanian apparel market. As the sector approaches an $8.56 billion valuation in 2026, the American retailer is moving beyond its established digital channels to address a specific growth in the B2C fashion segment. This localized strategy targets the high-potential ‘smart shopper’ demographic, which has become increasingly price-sensitive following the inflationary pressures of recent fiscal cycles. By securing space in Bucharest’s dominant outlet ecosystem, Gap leverages a high-traffic environment to facilitate rapid inventory turnover while maintaining the brand's premium perception.
Competitive positioning and omnichannel synergy
The transition to a physical presence serves as a necessary response to the aggressive regional expansion of global rivals like Primark and H&M. With Romanian consumer behavior still heavily favoring in-person fit assessment and tactile engagement, the Militari facility provides a crucial touchpoint for brand trust. This ‘clicks-to-bricks’ transition is designed to optimize regional conversion rates by merging the convenience of e-commerce with the reliability of a physical storefront. Following a strong global performance in 2025 where net sales reached $15.4 billion, Gap’s entry into Romania functions as a primary driver for its 2026 growth outlook of 3 per cent. Through strategic franchise collaborations, the company aims to solidify its market share in the Balkan region, converting its 55-year heritage into a sustainable competitive advantage in emerging markets.
American heritage and global expansion strategy
Gap Inc. is a San Francisco-based global retailer renowned for denim and casual essentials. Operating roughly 3,500 stores across 35 countries, the firm is currently focusing on international franchise growth and omnichannel integration. With a net income of $171 million reported recently, Gap is prioritizing the Central and Eastern European mid-market segment.
UK-India textile machinery coalition launches to modernize global supply chains
Machinery Association (BTMA) has officially launched the UK-India Textile Machinery Coalition, a strategic initiative designed to synchronize British engineering excellence with India’s ambitious $350 billion textile market target for 2030.
This development coincides with the May 2026 operationalization of the India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), which eliminates tariffs on 99 per cent of goods. As India faces a critical need to upgrade its manufacturing infrastructure to compete with regional rivals, the coalition provides a formal framework for Indian mills to access high-end UK technologies in fiber extrusion, digital printing, and forensic fabric inspection.
Driving productivity through sustainable innovation
The coalition enters the market as Indian manufacturers under the ‘Champion SME’ scheme seek to bridge a significant productivity gap. British firms, such as the award-winning Fibre Extrusion Technology (FET), are now positioned to supply toxic-solvent-free systems that are 15 times stronger than steel, catering to the burgeoning technical textiles segment. This partnership is not merely about equipment sales; it is about embedding resource-efficient, Industry 4.0 standards into the heart of India's garment clusters, stated a senior BTMA official during the April 2026 Techtextil exhibition. By reducing the current 12 per cent average tariff barriers through CETA, the coalition facilitates a lower-cost transition to sustainable manufacturing, essential for Indian exporters aiming to meet the rigorous ESG mandates of European and North American retail giants.
Engineering the future of textiles
The British Textile Machinery Association (BTMA) represents the UK’s leading textile machinery and accessory manufacturers. Focused on global export markets, it provides advanced solutions in spinning, weaving, and quality assurance. BTMA is currently expanding its footprint in South Asia, leveraging the UK-India CETA to drive long-term fiscal growth and technological parity for its member firms.
Decathlon and IKEA synergy redefines technical apparel distribution in the UK
The strategic debut of Decathlon’s 1,188-sq-m unit within IKEA’s Croydon flagship on April 24, 2026, represents a sophisticated shift in how technical apparel and sporting textiles reach the British consumer. This ‘one-box’ retail architecture capitalizes on the ‘home-wellness’ trend, where 36 per cent of UK residents now prioritize domestic spaces for fitness and hobbies. By embedding an extensive range of over 5,000 sporting goods and specialized performance fabrics into the high-traffic IKEA ecosystem, the partnership seeks to capitalize on shared footfall. Retail analysts anticipate this cross-category integration will generate a conversion uplift of up to 12 per cent, as shoppers increasingly seek seamless access to both activewear and home infrastructure.
Circularity and operational efficiency in large-format retail
This collaboration serves as a commercial hedge against rising occupancy costs and the logistical pressures of rapid-delivery e-commerce. The unit functions as a high-margin service hub, featuring on-site repair workshops and ‘Buyback’ programs that directly address the apparel industry’s urgent move toward circularity. For Ingka Group, currently midway through a €5 billion global investment cycle, leasing space to Decathlon optimizes underutilized square footage within its massive 25,000-sq-m footprints. ‘Co-opetition’ models like this, already yielding data-backed success in Sweden and Austria, allow legacy retailers to leverage massive visitor bases to defend market share. This pilot marks a significant step for Decathlon in scaling its UK presence through lean, high-efficiency formats that merge textile retail with service-led sustainability.
Strategic partnership for sustainable growth
Decathlon is a premier global designer and retailer of sporting goods, operating 1,900 stores across 80 countries with a 2025 net income of €910 million. In collaboration with IKEA, the world’s largest furniture retailer, the firm is expanding its UK footprint through compact, community-focused hubs that prioritize circularity and accessible technical apparel.










