
In the grand arithmetic of India’s expanding trade engagement with the US, the headlines usually gravitate toward oil cargoes, aircraft orders, and defence hardware. Yet, tucked beneath these big-ticket line items, a quieter transformation is unfolding inside spinning sheds and weaving floors across India’s textile clusters. Industrial hemp, once relegated to niche experimentation is fast emerging as a strategic lever in New Delhi’s ambitious plan to scale imports from the US to $500 billion over the next five years. What began as a diplomatic trade commitment is now turning into an operational advantage for Indian apparel exporters chasing premium Western markets.
For mills long battered by cotton price volatility and the environmental scrutiny around synthetics, US-grown hemp offers something rare: predictability: predictable volumes; predictable quality; predictable compliance. In an era when global retailers demand both China-plus-one diversification and carbon accountability, that trifecta is becoming commercially decisive. The result is a supply chain reset that could quietly redraw the competitive map of global textiles.
For decades, India’s textile backbone oscillated between two extremes monsoon-dependent natural fibers and petrochemical synthetics tied to fossil fuel cycles. Both carried risk. Cotton prices swung wildly with weather and geopolitics, while synthetics attracted increasing regulatory and reputational pushback over microplastics and emissions.
The new US trade corridor introduces what industry executives describe as a plug-and-play fiber ecosystem. Instead of fragmented sourcing through intermediaries, hemp shipments now arrive with farm-level documentation, standardized mechanical processing, and verified Life Cycle Assessment data. For compliance teams grappling with tightening environmental norms in the United States and the European Union, that transparency is invaluable.
Digital Product Passport readiness soon to be mandatory across parts of Europe becomes far easier when a fiber’s journey can be traced back to the field. What hemp offers, in effect, is industrial discipline in a segment that historically operated on artisanal variability.
India is no stranger to hemp imports. Mills have long sourced fiber from China and parts of France. But 2026 is marking a decisive pivot. The difference lies less in geography and more in process engineering. US producers rely on large-scale mechanical decortication rather than water-heavy traditional retting. That shift reduces both environmental footprint and fiber inconsistency — two pain points that previously limited hemp’s scalability for apparel.
|
Feature |
US Heartland hemp |
Chinese hemp |
European (French) hemp |
|
Extraction Method |
Mechanical Decortication |
Traditional Water Retting |
Dew Retting |
|
Sustainability Profile |
Verified LCA / Carbon Negative |
High Water Consumption |
Low Impact / Highly Regulated |
|
Purity & Consistency |
High (Machine Standardized) |
Variable (Hand-processed) |
High (Textile Grade) |
|
Traceability |
Farm-to-Fiber (DPP Ready) |
Limited / Multi-tier |
High (Regional Origin) |
|
Commercial Entry |
$4,000 / Metric Ton |
$1,350 / Metric Ton |
$1,200 / Metric Ton |
|
Trade Benefit |
18% Reciprocal Tariff Route |
Standard Import Duties |
FTA / Bilateral Routes |
At first glance, the US option appears expensive nearly three times the Chinese price. But the headline number masks the economics. Mechanical extraction yields cleaner fiber that needs less downstream processing, reducing waste, chemical inputs, and machine downtime. Add tariff benefits and faster throughput, and mills report that the effective cost gap narrows sharply. In practice, reliability is proving more valuable than cheapness.
The trade reset of 2026 has reduced reciprocal tariffs to 18 per cent, subtly but meaningfully altering India’s export competitiveness. That two-percentage-point edge over rivals such as Bangladesh and Vietnam may sound marginal, but in high-volume apparel contracts, it directly protects margins that often hover in single digits.
Experts point out an even bigger upside: if garments use US-origin fibers like hemp, they could qualify for deeper concessions, mirroring earlier zero-duty benefits tied to American cotton. This effectively transforms India into a value-add processing hub for US raw materials — importing fiber, exporting finished apparel, and capturing the manufacturing margin in between. It is less about buying American and more about monetizing American origin.
For years, sustainable materials carried a premium that brands were reluctant to absorb. Hemp’s latest iteration is flipping that narrative. Industrial hemp uses roughly 95 per cent less water than cotton and requires no pesticides. But what makes it commercially attractive is performance. Spinners are blending hemp with cotton, lyocell, and bamboo to create fabrics that combine durability with comfort ideal for denim, workwear, and active categories. Unlike polyester blends, these fabrics avoid the microplastic problem that has begun to haunt synthetic apparel.
Environmental compliance is no longer just marketing. It’s becoming a procurement prerequisite. Hemp checks that box while strengthening fabric resilience a rare alignment of ethics and economics.
The most convincing proof has come from denim. A consortium of global brands recently partnered with Indian mills to test hemp blends at industrial scale. Using US-grown fiber, mills were able to cottonize hemp on existing ring spinning systems eliminating the need for expensive new machinery. Mechanical decortication paired with enzymatic retting delivered finer fibers and smoother processing.
The numbers were telling: Lead times dropped 15 per cent; processing variability declined; a 50,000-garment run using a 20 per cent hemp blend saved over 4 million liters of water. For manufacturers accustomed to pilots that never scale, this was different. The process worked on standard equipment, at commercial volumes, with measurable savings. That practicality is what turns an experiment into an industry shift.
Driving much of this transformation is Heartland Industries, a Detroit-based materials science company positioning itself as a carbon-negative hemp innovator. Rather than selling raw agricultural output, the company supplies engineered, standardized fibers tailored for textile and automotive applications. Each shipment arrives with traceability documentation, aligning with tightening transparency mandates in Western markets. Its approach signals hemp’s evolution from cottage crop to industrial commodity.
With the global hemp fiber market projected to cross $28 billion by 2026, what was once alternative is rapidly becoming mainstream particularly for supply chains under pressure to prove sustainability credentials.
What makes hemp’s rise notable isn’t just its environmental logic. It’s its geopolitical utility. By anchoring part of its textile inputs to the US, India strengthens trade reciprocity while insulating exporters from tariff shocks and compliance risks. The fiber effectively serves as a diplomatic bridge one that converts trade policy into production efficiency. In the past, trade agreements were abstract constructs negotiated in ministries. Today, they show up directly on the factory floor.
Bales of American hemp entering Indian mills are more than raw material. They are proof that supply chains are becoming instruments of strategy.
If oil and aircraft dominate the speeches, hemp may quietly dominate the margins stitching together sustainability, competitiveness, and geopolitics into a single thread that runs through India’s next export chapter.

The British high street is reinventing itself where traditional retail models, particularly in apparel, are colliding with evolving consumer priorities. The era of postwar local trade, once defined by butchers, haberdashers, and corner grocers has long faded, and modern high streets face a new test: thriving not just as shopping destinations, but as centers of community and experience. Data for 2026 shows that success now hinges on social currency, as retailers compete to offer meaning and engagement, rather than just products. Amid the threat of a K-shaped economic recovery, where affluent shoppers advance while others tighten their belts the high street is pivoting toward an experiential model that prioritizes interaction over transaction.
The decline of specialized local retailers increased when planning permissions for new infrastructure encouraged the growth of out-of-town superstores. Independent apparel and hardware shops found themselves suddenly disadvantaged, as retail parks drew footfall away from traditional town centers. Yet 2026 shows a shift. High street vacancy rates are polarizing: London, Cambridge, and Brighton maintain under 10 per cent vacancies, while smaller northern towns face spiralling operating costs. To counter this, commercial landlords are now offering flexible leases, attracting eclectic independent brands that provide unique products absent from standardized superstore aisles.
|
Retail metric (2025-26 forecast) |
Data value |
Source |
|
Total UK Clothing Market Value |
£67.8 Billion |
Mintel |
|
Online Share of Clothing Spend |
48% |
Retail Economics |
|
High Street Footfall Resilience |
-0.9% (YoY) |
BRC-Sensormatic |
|
Projected Clothing Spend Growth (2025-2030) |
11% |
Mintel |
The transition from traditional retail to experiential models mirrors historical shifts such as the initial surprise at self-service grocery stores. Today, the high street is adapting to e-commerce, which now accounts for nearly half of all clothing spend, by emphasizing what online shopping cannot provide. Leading fashion retailers are turning stores into showrooming hubs, blending online fulfillment with physical interaction. Brands like Next are outperforming the market, with 2026 projections showing a 7.5 per cent sales increase for those that successfully integrate digital and in-store experiences.
ReLondon’s High Street Initiative exemplifies modern regeneration. Beginning in 2025, the program provided small grants starting at £2,500 to independent retailers to implement waste-reducing strategies. Outcomes were immediate:
Business growth: 94 per cent of participating shops reported increased footfall.
Sector innovation: Fashion retailers added repair services via SOJO and take-back schemes.
Community impact: Monthly engagement exceeded 27,000 customers, cementing the high street as a service hub rather than just a product warehouse.
This shows that circular economy services that include resale, repair, and rental are not optional extras but critical drivers of both footfall and loyalty.
High street survival is closely tied to fiscal policy. From April 2026, a new business rates surcharge on properties valued above £500,000 will impose a £600 million burden on major retailers. This large-store tax disproportionately affects anchor stores such as River Island, which plans to close 32 stores by early 2026. While 280,000 smaller properties may benefit from reduced rates, analysts warn that the loss of major brands risks creating footfall gaps. The opportunity now lies in hyper-local retail, where community-oriented, sustainable brands command premium loyalty.
The British high street remains the backbone of local retail, offering apparel and essential services across hubs including London, Manchester, and Edinburgh. After decades of ceding ground to out-of-town malls, high streets are now focusing on experience-led growth and circular economy services. 2026 projections suggest modest overall market growth of 0.9 per cent as retailers optimize physical footprints, proving that when the high street becomes a destination for community and engagement, it can remain relevanteven in an age of online dominance.
Delivering a strong performance for Q4, FY25, American Eagle Outfitters (AEO) recorded a 10 per cent increase in total revenue to $1.76 billion. Surpassing market expectations, this growth was anchored by a 23 per cent comparable sales growth at the Aerie brand and consistent performance across its namesake apparel line. Despite a challenging macroeconomic environment, the company enters the FY26 with a assertive outlook, forecasting annual comparable sales to rise in the mid-single-digit range, supported by a deliberate focus on brand-led demand and operational efficiency.
While the retailer’s top-line results signal healthy consumer engagement, management has acknowledged the ongoing friction caused by geopolitical trade factors. Import duties negatively impacted the company’s gross margin by approximately 280 basis points during Q4, FY25 representing a $50 million headwind. To mitigate these pressures, American Eagle is prioritizing supply chain diversification and stringent cost management. Executive leadership anticipates that these foundational efforts, alongside planned investments in high-impact advertising, will enable the brand to achieve an operating profit between $390 million and $410 million in 2026.
The company’s growth strategy centers on the continued expansion of the Aerie and Offline by Aerie brands, which have successfully captured significant market share among younger demographics. By prioritizing high-growth categories such as activewear and intimates, Aerie has become a primary driver of overall shareholder value. Simultaneously, the company has completed a significant corporate restructuring, including the divestment of its Quiet Platforms logistics division. This strategic shedding of non-core assets underscores a commitment to streamlining operations, allowing AEO to reallocate capital toward omnichannel technological enhancements and a more productive physical store fleet.
Undergoing a structural evolution, the global digital textile printing industry is fast entering a phase of accelerated industrial adoption, with valuations projected to see consistent double-digit growth through 2035.
This expansion is driven by a fundamental change in how fashion brands manage supply chains, moving away from high-inventory traditional models toward agile, data-driven, and on-demand production frameworks.
The current wave of innovation is defined by a move toward high-speed, single-pass inkjet systems and AI-integrated workflows. These technologies are effectively solving long-standing barriers to entry, such as slow production speeds and inconsistent color reproduction.
By leveraging advanced raster image processing (RIP) software and automated color management, manufacturers can now ensure brand-standard consistency across diverse substrates, from natural cottons to technical polyester blends. This technological integration not only increases throughput but also optimizes ink consumption, enhancing profitability for both large-scale manufacturers and agile medium-sized enterprises.
Environmental accountability has become a primary catalyst for capital expenditure in the sector. Traditional rotary screen printing remains a significant contributor to industrial water pollution, often requiring intensive effluent treatment. In contrast, digital textile printing facilitates a dramatic reduction in water usage - often by more than 90 per cent - and eliminates the need for physical screen production. As regulatory frameworks regarding water usage and chemical disposal, such as those gaining traction in the European Union and California, tighten, digital printing provides a compliant, future-proof solution that aligns with corporate Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) targets.
The industry is benefiting from the convergence of e-commerce expansion and the rising demand for mass personalization. Brands are increasingly utilizing digital printing to execute micro-collections and customized apparel lines that respond rapidly to consumer trends without the financial risk of overstock. While high upfront capital investment in hardware remains a hurdle for some, the long-term operational efficiencies, coupled with the ability to near-shore production, are compelling textile leaders to prioritize this digital transformation as a strategic competitive advantage.
Digital textile printing applies colorants directly to fabric via specialized inkjet technology, eliminating traditional screens. Primary markets include apparel, sportswear, home décor, and soft signage. Growth is fueled by on-demand production and sustainability demands. While historically dominated by conventional methods, the sector now prioritizes high-speed, automated digital workflows to improve margins. The market’s financial outlook remains strong, with major players and innovators investing heavily in ink chemistry and hardware scalability to capture rising demand for flexible, eco-friendly manufacturing solutions.
As the global textile recycling market eyes a projected valuation of over US$7 billion by 2026, the industry is transitioning from conceptual ambition to industrial-scale implementation.
Scheduled for April 29–30, 2026, in Charlotte, the upcoming Textiles Recycling Expo USA, serves as a critical nexus for this shift, aiming to bridge the infrastructure gaps currently hindering domestic circularity.
From ambition to industrial infrastructure
While sustainability commitments from major fashion brands have accelerated demand for recycled fibers, the supply chain remains plagued by fragmented collection systems and the difficulty of processing complex fiber blends. Industry stakeholders emphasize, achieving a truly circular economy requires more than just goodwill; it necessitates robust investment in automated sorting technology. Recent benchmarks indicate, the integration of artificial intelligence and robotics into sorting facilities can boost capacity by as much as 90 per cent, transforming previously unmanageable waste streams into high-quality feedstock for both mechanical and chemical recycling processes.
The sector is also bracing for the impact of emerging state-level Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) mandates. While these policies aim to standardize end-of-life responsibility, companies face significant challenges regarding compliance in a fragmented legal environment. Experts warn that unless states align their definitions and requirements, the operational burden on producers will mount, potentially slowing the transition to scalable, circular outcomes.
Accelerating Circularity is a non-profit organization dedicated to building systems for textile-to-textile recycling. It operates by connecting stakeholders across the apparel value chain to bridge gaps in collection, sorting, and processing. Through research and pilot projects, the group focuses on increasing the supply of recycled fibers for the US market. With growing regulatory pressure, its efforts are central to shaping a more transparent and scalable infrastructure for the domestic apparel industry.

Levi Strauss & Co is aggressively restructuring its commercial footprint to favor direct-to-consumer (DTC) channels, which now account for a record 49 per cent of total net revenues as of Q1 2026. This strategic realignment is exemplified by the recent completion of a three-store expansion in British Columbia within a single quarter, part of a global target to open 60 net new ‘system doors’ annually. By shifting away from third-party wholesale, the brand is successfully capturing higher average unit retails (AUR) and mitigating 150 basis points of gross margin pressure stemming from global tariff headwinds. This pivot is not merely about physical locations; e-commerce now commands a 22 per cent organic growth rate, boosted by the 2026 rollout of AI-driven "super-agents" designed to personalize the digital shopping experience.
A definitive milestone in the company’s ‘Blue Tab’ premiumization strategy was the final closing of the Dockers® divestiture on February 27, 2026. By offloading the khaki-focused brand to Authentic Brands Group, Levi’s has effectively sharpened its operational focus on high-margin denim and the fast-growing Beyond Yoga segment, which saw a 45 per cent organic surge in the most recent fiscal period. The capital liberated from this sale, alongside a $200 million accelerated share repurchase program, reinforces a disciplined fiscal roadmap targeting an adjusted EBIT margin of 12 per cent by year-end. As the global denim market expands toward an estimated $78.9 billion, Levi’s is leveraging its ‘head-to-toe’ lifestyle approach - where non-denim tops now drive nearly half of revenue growth - to outpace competitors through localized agility and premium product tiers.
Levi Strauss & Co designs and markets iconic jeanswear across 110 countries through 3,300 retail touchpoints. Focusing on its flagship Levi’s brand and Beyond Yoga, the company is currently optimizing for 5 per cent to 6 per cent organic growth in 2026. Historically significant since 1853, it remains the dominant force in the global apparel sector.
Scheduled on March 25-28, 2026, the 25th-anniversary edition of Costa Rica Fashion Week (CRFW) marks a decisive transition from a conventional runway event to a formalized economic vehicle. CRFW has secured institutional status by integrating into the International Festival of the Arts (FIA). This state-supported alignment facilitates the professionalization of the local textile value chain, aiming to convert traditional craftsmanship into high-margin export commodities. The upcoming showcase at La Antigua Aduana serves as a primary hub for this structural evolution, providing local designers with the requisite visibility to secure international retail contracts and foreign direct investment.
An important development for the 2026 season is the formal procurement alliance with Raquel Torres, European Specialist, designed to navigate the stringent regulatory frameworks of the European Union. As the EU’s Strategy for Sustainable and Circular Textiles mandates that all textile products on its market be durable and recyclable by 2030, this partnership provides Costa Rican labels with a vital roadmap for compliance. Data from the FY25 suggests, such targeted trade alliances can enhance brand visibility in foreign markets by up to 40 per cent. By establishing a direct pipeline to Spanish and broader European distributors, CRFW is actively addressing the ‘scale-up’ challenge, moving Latin American textiles from artisanal niche production to standardized, globally competitive apparel solutions.
Costa Rica Fashion Week is the nation’s official textile and apparel platform, specialized in promoting sustainable regional talent since 2001. Operating as a primary link between Latin American designers and global markets, the organization facilitates export growth through strategic international alliances. CRFW remains dedicated to democratizing fashion while driving national GDP through high-value creative exports.
Following a landmark fiscal performance in 2025, Adidas has signaled a sustained upward trajectory, reporting record revenues of €24.8 billion. This 13 per cent currency-neutral growth is underpinned by a rare double-digit growth pattern across every geographic market and sales channel. In an era where many apparel retailers are navigating inconsistent consumer demand, Adidas has successfully balanced its direct-to-consumer (DTC) and wholesale operations. The firm’s gross margin has increased to 51.6 per cent, a 0.8 percentage point improvement, primarily driven by a high-margin product mix and lower logistics overheads. The Fourth Quarter of 2025 further solidified this trend, with net sales reaching €6.1 billion, reinforcing the brand's dominance in both lifestyle and performance categories.
The Herzogenaurach-based sportswear giant is translating its 54 per cent jump in operating profit - now totaling €2,056 million - into significant investor returns. By proposing a 40 per cent dividend hike to €2.80 per share and a massive €1.5 billion cash return program, the company is demonstrating peak confidence in its medium-term liquidity. Net income from continuing operations has expanded by nearly 70 per cent, allowing Adidas to outpace industry peers in capital reinvestment. Moving into 2026, management is prioritizing inventory lean-management and high-velocity product launches in the North American and Greater China sectors. This operational discipline, coupled with an 8.3 per cent operating margin, positions Adidas to withstand inflationary pressures while continuing to scale its global retail footprint.
Adidas is a global leader in athletic footwear and apparel, catering to professional athletes and the ‘athleisure’ lifestyle market. Aiming for consistent double-digit growth through 2026, the company focuses on DTC expansion and high-profile collaborations. Founded in 1949, it currently manages a record €24.8 billion revenue portfolio.
The announcement of Asahi Kasei Advance’s inaugural participation at Techtextil 2026 marks a strategic move to penetrate the European technical textile market with a concentrated portfolio of 14 specialized brands. Scheduled for April 21–24 in Frankfurt, the company’s showcase in Hall 12.1 focuses on a sophisticated convergence of nonwovens and flame-retardant technologies. By isolating four core proprietary materials for this debut, the Tokyo-based firm is positioning its high-performance fibers as essential components for the aerospace, automotive, and protective apparel sectors. Industry analysts suggest this move is a response to the growing global demand for multi-functional textiles that offer both extreme durability and environmental compliance.
The decision to showcase at Frankfurt reflects a broader sector impact where Asian textile leaders are aggressively seeking to set new benchmarks in the "zero-defect" manufacturing space. Beyond simple fabric production, Asahi Kasei Advance is showcasing integrated solutions that address the rigorous safety standards of the European Union. A realistic assessment indicates that by highlighting flame-retardancy alongside lightweight nonwovens, the company aims to secure long-term supply contracts with Tier-1 industrial manufacturers. This exhibition serves as a critical litmus test for the company’s ability to compete with established Western chemical-textile giants, leveraging its history of polymer precision to offer high-margin alternatives in a market increasingly focused on resource-efficient technical gear.
Asahi Kasei Advance, a key division of the Asahi Kasei Group, specializes in high-performance fibers, functional fabrics, and nonwoven materials for global industrial markets. The firm is currently executing a 2026 growth strategy focused on European expansion. Historically rooted in polymer expertise, it maintains a strong financial outlook driven by premium material exports.

The European nonwovens and technical textiles sector is facing an unprecedented compliance crisis as a rise of customs misclassification threatens to destabilize supply chains across the continent. EDANA, the international trade association representing the nonwovens industry, has issued stark warnings: a significant volume of Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET) spunbond is entering the EU under outdated or incorrect customs codes, creating exposure to retroactive duties, administrative fines, and even potential criminal penalties for apparel and textile importers.
Market intelligence indicates that imports of PET spunbond and related staple fiber products from third countries reached between 15,000 and 30,000 metric tonnes annually in 2024 and 2025. Yet, official customs records, which rely on mandatory Combined Nomenclature (CN) codes, report volumes far below these figures. Jacques Prigneaux of EDANA described the situation as a ‘clear mismatch’, noting that many importers continue to use legacy codes out of habit, overlooking the updated CN codes implemented in 2024.
|
Product Category |
Mandatory CN code |
Observed market volume (MT) |
Reported volume status |
|
PET Spunbond |
5603 14 20 |
15,000 – 30,000 |
Significantly Lower |
|
Staple Fiber |
5603 94 20 |
15,000 – 30,000 |
Significantly Lower |
This difference underscores a systemic issue in the trade compliance framework. While importers may perceive minor CN code errors as administrative oversights, EDANA emphasizes that in the current regulatory climate, these mismatches are treated as high-risk compliance failures with serious financial and legal implications.
The timing of this misclassification trend is particularly precarious. In December 2025, the European Commission mandated registration for imports of certain PET spunbond from China, a regulatory precursor to an ongoing anti-dumping investigation. Any products imported under incorrect codes could now be retroactively subject to anti-dumping duties once the probe concludes.
Authorities are focusing on high-performance nonwovens with specific technical specifications: non-woven needle-punched polyester sheets weighing more than 70 g/m², thickness between 0.5 mm and 1.8 mm, and containing binders with less than 30 per cent glass fibers by weight. Importers misclassifying these goods to avoid the TARIC code 5603 1390 70 or related categories are increasingly viewed as deliberately circumventing trade defense measures, escalating both the risk and the consequences.
EDANA has highlighted a recurring pattern in which companies rely on outdated customs codes as a matter of habit. In these cases, internal databases are not updated, and customs agents are not informed of the 2024 code revisions. The result is a vulnerability that leaves importers exposed to fines and retroactive duties once authorities identify the discrepancies.
The association has formally requested that the European Commission and national customs authorities increase physical import inspections, a shift from passive oversight to active enforcement. For many businesses, the era of assuming that routine paperwork is sufficient is over. Failure to align internal compliance systems with regulatory updates now carries tangible financial and legal risks.
Experts urge apparel manufacturers and technical textile distributors to conduct immediate audits of their customs databases. This is especially critical for imports under preferential trade agreements or duty-free regimes, where customs scrutiny is heightened. Delegating compliance solely to external agents is no longer a viable risk management strategy. Instead, companies are advised to integrate internal oversight, ensure personnel are trained on regulatory updates, and implement systems capable of tracking CN code changes in real time.
Since its founding in 1971, EDANA has acted as the strategic hub for the nonwovens industry, supporting over 260 members with technical guidance, regulatory advocacy, and market intelligence. The association plays a critical role in balancing the growth of high-performance PET spunbond demand with the need for a fair and sustainable market.
As the EU’s regulatory environment tightens and anti-dumping investigations continue, EDANA’s 2026 focus remains on leveling the playing field against low-cost imports, ensuring compliance, and safeguarding both industry profitability and market integrity. For importers, the message is unequivocal: in the era of active enforcement, compliance cannot be left to habit, it must be embedded in the operational DNA of every business.