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Indias textile trade gets a Pacific push as New Zealand FTA removes tariff

 

India and New Zealand have inked a ‘once-in-a-generation’ Free Trade Agreement (FTA), one that will have a profound impact on Indian textile and apparel industry. Signed by commerce & industry minister Piyush Goyal, and New Zealand’s minister for trade and investment Todd McClay, the pact offers 100 per cent duty-free access for Indian exports. This will dismantle the 10 per cent tariff wall that previously hindered Indian garments from challenging the market dominance of regional competitors like China and Bangladesh.

Tariff disadvantage gives way

The primary catalyst of this agreement is the removal of peak tariffs on nearly 450 Indian tariff lines. For the apparel segment, where India currently holds a modest 4.4 per cent market share the removal of 10 per cent import duty is a game-changer for price-sensitive retail chains. As A Sakthivel, Chairman, Apparel Export Promotion Council (AEPC) points out, emphasized this fiscal relief will allow Indian MSMEs to scale volumes rapidly. "With zero-duty access, Indian products gain immediate price parity. We are now looking at trebling our ready-made garment (RMG) exports to New Zealand within just two years," he opines.

The table data outlines the baseline from which India is launching its expansion strategy. While apparel is the growth target, home textiles already show significant strength.

Table: India’s market footprint in New Zealand as of 2025

HS code

Product group

India's exports to NZ (US$ mn)

NZ imports from world (US$mn)

India's share (%)

63

Home Textiles, Made-Ups

48.59

282.33

17.20%

61

Knitted Apparel

24.03

622.77

3.90%

62

Woven Apparel

24.28

562.52

4.30%

57

Carpets

11.08

110.69

10.00%

53

Other Vegetable Fibres

4.31

9.99

43.10%

54

Man-Made Filaments

5.6

47.75

11.70%

A unique commercial angle of the deal is the reciprocal raw material strategy. Trade experts say India will leverage the FTA to import New Zealand’s world-renowned premium wool at lower costs. Ashwin Chandran, Chairman, Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI), highlighted this synergy, “New Zealand is a major exporter of high-quality wool. The FTA makes it lucrative for Indian companies to import this premium fiber and manufacture high-end garments in India, and then re-export them globally, including back to the Oceania market.” This circular trade model is expected to move Indian manufacturers from basic commodities to the luxury retail segment.

Diaspora demand and niche market peresence

The agreement also seeks to tap into New Zealand’s demographic shift; nearly 5 per cent of the population is now of Indian origin. This diaspora creates a steady demand for ethnic wear and traditional made-ups, categories where India already enjoys a 17.2 per cent share. Retailers in Auckland and Wellington are increasingly looking to diversify sourcing away from a single-country dependence, and India’s reputation for natural fibers (cotton and silk) gives a reliable alternative. Trade analysts point to HS Code 53 (Other Vegetable Fibres), where India already has 43.1 per cent share, as a blueprint for how specialized Indian products can dominate niche high-value categories.

Tirrupur knitwear opportunity

The Knitted Apparel (HS 61) sector was the largest untapped opportunity. In 2025, New Zealand imported over US$622 million in knitwear, but India’s contribution was a mere US$24 million. High tariffs made Indian basic tees and polos 10 per cent more expensive than those from duty-free competitors. However, post-FTA, the knitwear cluster in Tirrupur, , can now ship a high-volume consignment of organic cotton T-shirts to a New Zealand retail giant like The Warehouse with zero landed duty. Experts forecast this cost-saving alone will shift 5-7 per cent of New Zealand's total knitwear sourcing to India by 2028.

The AEPC is the nodal agency for promoting Indian garment exports, representing over 8,000 exporters. With a focus on cotton, the council is now steering the industry toward Man-Made Fibers (MMF) and sustainable fashion to align with global ESG standards. The AEPC aims to support India's broader goal of reaching US$350 billion in textile production by 2030. Currently, the council is focused on high-income ‘Oceania’ markets to reduce dependence on traditional EU and US buyers, using the New Zealand FTA as a strategic beachhead for the wider Pacific region

  

The landscape for Indian garment exports is set for a significant transition following the signing of a comprehensive Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between India and New Zealand on April 27, 2026. Negotiated by Piyush Goyal, Commerce Minister and his counterpart Todd McClay, the deal provides Indian exporters with 100 per cent duty-free access to a market that currently imports over US$ 1.2 billion in ready-made garments annually. This development arrives at a critical juncture for the Apparel Export Promotion Council (AEPC), which aims to address the current modest market share of 4.4 per cent by leveraging immediate price competitiveness. By removing existing tariff barriers, the agreement effectively repositioned India to challenge dominant regional suppliers, specifically in high-volume categories like cotton knitwear and shirts.

MSME expansion and fiber diversification to drive export volumes

AEPC anticipates, the trade pact will act as a catalyst for trebling ready-made garment exports to New Zealand over the next 24 months. Dr A Sakthivel, Chairman indicated, the strategy focuses not only on India's traditional dominance in cotton-based apparel but also on a planned expansion into man-made fiber segments to better align with New Zealand’s shifting consumer demand. This shift is particularly material for India’s small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), which constitute the backbone of the apparel value chain and are expected to see a surge in job creation. As the industry moves toward more sustainable export growth, the council plans to initiate focused capacity-building programs to ensure local manufacturers can meet the technical and volume requirements of the newly accessible market.

  

As India prepares to host the Bharat Tex 2026 mega-event in new delhi, the apparel export promotion council (AEPC) is shifting its focus toward aggressive supply chain integration. at a recent high-level roundtable in Bengaluru, Dr A Sakthivel, Chairman, AEPC, addressed representatives from 40 global retailers - including Walmart, PVH, and Ralph Lauren - regarding the industry’s critical technology and quality gaps. in a notable strategy shift, the council proposed active collaboration with the Taiwanese textile industry to import advanced synthetic yarn manufacturing technologies. Acknowledging that domestic fabric quality remains a hurdle, the leadership suggested that short-term imports of specialized materials may be required while India builds a more robust, traceable, and compliant internal ecosystem to meet the standards of premium global sourcing.

Trade agreements set the stage for a decade of industrial growth

The industry's current roadmap is heavily influenced by a suite of new free trade agreements (FTAs) with advanced economies, which leaders believe marks the beginning of a defining decade for Indian exports. Naren Goenka, Chairman, Bharat Tex emphasized, the current geopolitical climate offers India a unique window to emerge as the preferred alternative to traditional sourcing hubs. beyond mere manufacturing, the discussions highlighted a move toward circularity and mandatory traceability, reflecting the sustainability requirements of major buying houses like marks & spencer and C&A. by urging international brands to move beyond transactional relationships and proactively promote India’s capabilities, the council aims to transform the domestic apparel sector from a garment assembly hub into a technologically advanced, end-to-end global supply chain leader.

  

The Lego Group has formally unveiled its inaugural Shrek collection, marking a pivotal expansion of its intellectual property (IP) portfolio into DreamWorks Animation’s multi-billion-dollar franchise. Scheduled for a June 1, 2026, global release, the collection features the flagship ‘Shrek, Donkey & Puss in Boots’ set alongside a specialized BrickHeadz line. This launch is a calculated move to capitalize on the ‘kidult’ demographic - adult fans who now account for approximately 25 per cent of all toy sales. By securing the Shrek license, Lego is tapping into a 25-year legacy of pop-culture relevance, strategically positioning these sets as high-margin collectibles rather than simple playthings

Financial momentum and supply chain localization

This product rollout follows a record-breaking FY2025, where Lego reported a 12 per cent revenue increase to DKK 83.5 billion ($12 billion), significantly outperforming a global toy market that grew by only 7 per cent. To support this aggressive product pipeline, which sees nearly 50 per cent of its 860-item catalog refreshed annually, the company is finalizing a new full-scale manufacturing facility in Virginia, USA, slated for 2026 completion. This localization effort is designed to shorten lead times for North American retail partners and mitigate the 30 per cent increase in logistics costs observed across the consumer goods sector over the past 24 months.

Omnichannel resilience amid discretionary shifts

As retail shifts toward ‘cozy culture’ and tech-free tactile experiences, Lego is doubling down on its ‘destination retail’ model, having surpassed 1,050 branded stores worldwide. The Shrek collection serves as a primary driver for these physical touchpoints, aiming to sustain the 16 per cent consumer sales growth reported last year. Despite inflationary pressures on discretionary spending, Lego’s ability to maintain operating margins near 26 per cent is attributed to its tiered SKU strategy. By offering entry-level BrickHeadz at $25 alongside premium $130 builds, the brand effectively captures diverse consumer segments, ensuring industrial resilience in an increasingly volatile global apparel and lifestyle market.

Operational scale and revenue outlook

The Lego Group is a privately held global leader in construction toys, operating in over 120 countries with a heavy focus on the US, China, and Western Europe. Through its partnership with Universal Products & Experiences, LEGO is scaling its licensed portfolio to drive toward a projected DKK 90 billion revenue target by 2027. Founded in 1932, the company recently achieved a milestone of using 52% renewable and recycled materials in its bricks, aligning financial growth with aggressive sustainability mandates.

  

The German Partnership for Sustainable Textiles has officially completed its structural evolution into Dialogue and Impact for Sustainable Textiles (DST). Effective April 2026, this transition signals a fundamental departure from the voluntary commitment frameworks that defined the previous decade. As the European Union’s Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) begins to anchor legal liabilities for apparel brands, the DST is repositioning as a technical implementation platform. The objective is to convert high-level policy into shop-floor reality, moving beyond reporting to active risk mitigation in global supply chains.

Resource mobilization for supply chain resilience

A critical pillar of the DST relaunch is the ‘Learning & Implementation Community,’ which shifts financial responsibility toward private sector participants. In a notable strategic change, member companies will now assume direct funding roles for field projects, particularly those targeting living wage gaps and chemical management. Current industry data suggests this shift is timely; nearly 74 per cent of consumers now indicate a willingness to pay a premium for verified, traceable apparel. By integrating the Digital Product Passport (DPP) readiness into its core mission, the DST aims to provide its members with a competitive edge in a market where 2027 regulatory deadlines are rapidly approaching.

Systemic integration of global rights holders

The DST framework introduces a more inclusive governance model that integrates local trade unions and rights holders directly into the decision-making process. Dialogue alone does not improve conditions; real impact requires companies to change purchasing practices, noted a representative from a leading civil society partner during the April kick-off event. This ‘2+2’ model - uniting industry, academia, and local stakeholders - mirrors successful Indo-German bilateral projects and focuses on scalable industrial solutions for environmental and social compliance.

Strategic evolution and performance

Formerly the Partnership for Sustainable Textiles (founded 2014), the DST is a multi-stakeholder network overseen by the German Federal Government (BMZ). It coordinates sustainability initiatives for the German and European apparel sectors, focusing on technical textiles and global supply chain transparency. With a membership base that has navigated the industry's $1.7 trillion global valuation, the DST now prioritizes CSDDD compliance and circular economy integration to drive long-term sector performance.

  

The Central Cottage Industries Corporation of India (CCIC) has inaugurated its premier heritage designer collection, ‘Soul Threads,’ marking a decisive pivot in the state-run enterprise’s brand revival strategy. Unveiled on April 24, 2026, at Jawahar Vyapar Bhawan, New Delhi, the exhibition integrates three thematic pillars - Anek, Maati, and Punah - reimagining Khadi and traditional weaves through a contemporary lens. By blending cotton, silk, and eri silk with advanced retting and upcycling techniques, CCIC is addressing the ‘modern utility’ gap that historically hindered artisanal exports. This initiative is timely, as India’s textile exports grew to Rs 3.16 lakh crore in FY 2025-26, with the handicrafts segment (excluding carpets) leading value-added growth at 6.1 prer cent.

Market resilience and the global 'Vocal for Local' vision

The ‘Soul Threads’ showcase acts as a high-visibility commercial platform for rural artisans and women-led enterprises, aligning with India’s broader objective of achieving a US$ 100 billion export milestone by 2030. Despite a revenue consolidation to Rs 41.9 crore in the previous fiscal year, CCIC is utilizing its premium designer collaborations to insulate traditional crafts from the price volatility of synthetic alternatives. Soul Threads signals our commitment to bridging heritage with innovation, positioning our weavers for a global audience, states Akhilesh Kumar, Chairman, CCIC. With the India-EU FTA and UK CETA now facilitating preferential market access, the corporation is poised to leverage these heritage assets to capture rising demand in high-growth markets like the UAE (up 22.3 per cent) and Japan.

Established in 1976 under the Ministry of Textiles, CCIC is India’s apex organization for promoting and retailing authentic handlooms and handicrafts. Operating flagship emporia in major metros, it supports over 40 million artisans. Current growth plans focus on digital transformation and expanding the ‘Jute Mark’ and ‘Handloom Mark’ certified designer lines internationally.

  

New Era Cap Co has officially inaugurated its North American flagship store in the heart of Manhattan’s SoHo district, marking a pivotal shift in the brand’s retail strategy toward hi-tech, experiential commerce. Located at 300 Lafayette Street, the store serves as a physical manifestation of ‘phygital’ retail, anchored by a massive 17x20 ft street-facing digital screen that broadcasts real-time collaborations and marketing campaigns. This immersive vestibule transitions into a sophisticated showroom where floor-to-ceiling cap displays meet original wooden hat forms from the brand’s first factories. By blending state-of-the-art visual engagement with its 100-year legacy, New Era is moving beyond transactional sales to cultivate a ‘collector’s sanctuary’ that resonates with Gen Z’s preference for immediate ownership and in-store storytelling.

Customization as a growth catalyst

Central to the flagship’s appeal is ‘The Garage,’ an old-school haberdashery-style space dedicated to hyper-personalization. The facility features on-site cap blocking machines and heat seals for custom patch application, allowing customers to design one-of-a-kind gear. This focus on individual expression aligns with New Era’s 2026 financial trajectory; the brand is projected to see a revenue growth of 5-10 per cent this year, following a robust US$ 352 million performance in 2025. With official licenses for the MLB, NFL, and NBA, the store acts as a high-velocity fulfillment hub for exclusive drops. This flagship is the global epicenter for the brand, allowing it to connect with its fanbase through innovation and creativity, notes Chris Koch, CEO during the April 27 opening.

Supplier to global teams

A global sports and lifestyle brand, New Era is the official on-field cap supplier for Major League Baseball and the National Football League. Headquartered in Buffalo, New York, the company operates across North America, Europe, and Asia. With estimated annual revenues between US$ 1 billion and US$ 10 billion, it is currently expanding its footprint through flagship experiential centers and high-profile collaborations with partners like adidas and Formula 1.

  

On the 13th anniversary of the Rana Plaza disaster, global advocacy groups, including Labour Behind the Label and the Clean Clothes Campaign, have intensified pressure on Hugo Boss to recommit to the Pakistan Accord for Health and Safety. While over 100 global retailers renewed the legally binding agreement in January 2026, the German luxury house and Polish retailer LPP are among the high-profile minority that is yet to sign the updated 2026-2029 framework. Campaigners argue, voluntary internal audits are insufficient, citing recent inspection reports from Pakistan that highlight persistent life-threatening risks, including obstructed fire exits and structural vulnerabilities, within the brand's established supply chain.

The economic imperative of binding safety standards

The Pakistan Accord has become a critical benchmark for the region’s US$ 4.4 billion export sector, covering approximately 474 factories and 550,000 workers. Data indicates, signatory brands have realized a 15.8 per cent increase in export value since 2024, as the Accord provides the transparency required by eco-conscious Western markets. Remembrance is hollow without enforceable protection, stated a representative from the Rana Plaza Solidarity Collective during a London protest on April 24, 2026. As the industry faces new climate-related health crises, the Accord’s mandate is evolving to include heat-stress protections, making brand participation essential for maintaining a resilient and ethically sound apparel manufacturing hub in South Asia.

International Accord Secretariat

The International Accord is the administrative body overseeing legally binding safety programs in Bangladesh and Pakistan. It facilitates independent factory inspections and worker grievance mechanisms for nearly 200 signatory brands. Following a strong 2025 performance, the Secretariat is now prioritizing geographical expansion into other major manufacturing hubs to standardize global apparel safety protocols.

  

Global leader in AI-driven 3D fashion solutions, Style3D is set to demonstrate its end-to-end digital garment workflow at the Bangladesh International Textile, Knitting, and Garment (BTKG) Expo 2026. Held at the International Convention City Bashundhara (ICCB) in Dhaka from April 29 to May 2, the showcase arrives as the Ready-Made Garment (RMG) sector faces mounting pressure from geopolitical supply chain disruptions. By integrating physics-based fabric simulation with GPU-accelerated rendering, Style3D enables manufacturers to slash physical sampling by up to 60 per cent. This shift is critical for Bangladesh’s ambition to reach a US$ 100 billion export target by 2030, as it allows factories to move from low-value basic items to high-margin, technically complex apparel.

Physics-based realism and commercial efficiency

The centerpiece of the exhibit is the Style3D Studio V8.0, which features advanced AI pattern generation and real-time drape prediction with a 95 per cent correlation to physical fits. For Bangladeshi exporters, this technology addresses the ‘time-to-market’ barrier, reducing design iterations from weeks to mere hours. Industry data for 2026 suggests, early adopters of virtual prototyping have realized a 40 per cent gain in workflow efficiency and a 70 per cent reduction in fabric waste. Digital twins are no longer optional; they are the baseline for a sustainable, responsive supply chain, noted a lead technology consultant. By replacing traditional physical samples with 4K-resolution digital assets, manufacturers can stabilize their bottom lines despite the rising costs of raw materials like Tossa jute and man-made fibers.

A unified platform

A premier provider of digital fashion infrastructure, Style3D offers a unified platform for 3D design, fabric digitization, and cloud collaboration. Serving global fashion houses and apparel manufacturers, the company focuses on reducing carbon footprints through virtual sampling. Growth plans for 2026 include deep integration with ERP and PLM systems across South Asian manufacturing hubs.

Style3D specializes in AI-powered 3D garment simulation and digital fabric libraries, primarily serving the global apparel and textile industries. With its core market in Asian manufacturing hubs, the firm is scaling its Enterprise API and virtual try-on tools. Backed by a 5.7% sector CAGR, Style3D aims to lead the transition toward a fully digitized, waste-free fashion ecosystem.

  

In a strategic effort to reclaim the global competitiveness of the ‘Golden Fiber,’ the Bangladesh Government has moved to reopen six closed state-owned jute mills by October 2026 under private sector management. Announced by Khandaker Abdul Muktadir, Textiles and Jute Minister, this transition shifts the sector away from historically inefficient state-led operations toward a market-driven model. Each revived facility is projected to attract investments between Tk 200 crore and Tk 500 crore, specifically targeting the production of diversified, high-value jute goods. By leasing idle assets to private operators, the administration aims to modernize manufacturing infrastructure and meet the rising international demand for biodegradable packaging and technical textiles.

Technological integration and export diversification

The government is simultaneously deploying an integrated agricultural framework to enhance fiber quality and yield. A foundational feasibility study, ‘Production and Distribution of Advanced Technology-based Jute and Jute Seeds,’ is currently underway, with full-scale implementation scheduled for November 2026. This initiative focuses on stabilizing the supply chain for 138 export markets, including the US and EU, where eco-conscious apparel brands are increasingly replacing synthetic materials with jute-blended yarns. Despite recent raw material price volatility, with Tossa and Meshta varieties seeing premiums of up to US$ 60 per metric ton, the mandate to digitize testing labs in Dhaka and Khulna ensures that Bangladesh’s 282 types of jute products adhere to rigorous global quality benchmarks.

Promoting diversified exports

The Bangladesh Textiles and Jute Ministry oversees the nation's jute and apparel sectors, contributing over 10 per cent to the national GDP. Focused on LDC graduation by late 2026, it promotes diversified exports through the Jute Diversification Promotion Center (JDPC). Their growth strategies emphasize public-private mill leases and a US$ 100 billion total export target by 2030.

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