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The Dhaka Apparel Summit was held December 7 to 9, 2014.Eighty-five speakers from Bangladesh, the European Union, the USA and other countries shared their views at nine sessions at the summit. Nearly 25 of the speakers were top officials of different western retailers and brands.

Among the participants were brands, fashion designers, sourcing executives, workers’ representatives, civil society organisations, buyers and academics. Among the issues discussed were road communication, environmental sustainability, workplace safety and sustainable production, responsible sourcing and productivity enhancement, and workplace tranquility.

Bangladesh has a target of earning 50 billion dollars from garment exports by 2021 and the summit debated ways on achieving that.

Around 6,000 people took part in the summit and around 15,000 visited the expo on fire fighting equipment, which was held on the sidelines of the summit. Local and foreign firms showcased fire fighting equipment at 92 stalls.

Bangladesh plans to build a knitwear village. The government will allocate 1,000 acres of land for the new project. The government has already allocated 482 acres for a woven garment makers’ project. A Chinese firm is collaborating on this project. A center of excellence will also be launched for the country’s apparel industry. This will support member companies in their skill development programs and will guide them in giving market-responsive training. 

bangladeshrmg2021.com/apparel-summit/

Vietnam's garment and textile export sector anticipates a good year ahead mainly because of the imminent free trade agreements. One is the agreement with the European Union, which will cut the tariff rate from the current 12 per cent to zero. Another is the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which would also bring in opportunities for the garment and textile companies to expand markets, especially in the US.

The current tax rates imposed on Vietnamese garment and textile products exported to the US are approximately 17 to 18 per cent. The signing of the TPP would cause the tariff to be cut gradually to zero. Also expected is a free trade agreement with Russia. As a result the garment and textile export industry anticipates a good year in 2015 and feels the export turnover could possibly exceed $24.5 billion.

The impending free trade agreements have helped attract importers, who want to take advantage of the agreements, to transfer orders from other countries to Vietnam. However, Vietnamese firms need to enhance their competitiveness to improve their position in the global garment and textile value chain. They also need to improve their quality to meet the requirements of import countries and to adhere to the guidelines set by the agreements.

Global yarn production increased in the second quarter of the current year compared to the previous quarter thanks to higher output in Asia, South and North America, despite a drop in Europe. Worldwide yarn stocks remained practically unchanged in the second quarter in comparison to the first quarter, with stocks falling in South America and Europe which were offset by higher inventories in Asia.

Year-on-year global yarn stocks jumped due to higher inventories in Europe, and especially in Asia, and in spite of plummeting inventories in South America. Yarn orders were up in Brazil, but down in Europe both in comparison to the previous quarter and year-on-year. On an annual basis, yarn production increased only as a result of higher output in Asia, with South America, North America and Europe recording reductions. Estimates for yarn production for the third quarter of 2014 are positive in Asia, North and South America but negative in Europe. Estimates for fabric production for the quarter are positive in Asia and South America but negative in Europe.

The outlook for yarn production for the fourth quarter is positive in Asia and stable in Europe and for fabric production this quarter the outlook is positive in Asia and stable in Europe.

Reliance Industries and China’s Shandong Ruyi will enter into a joint venture for textiles. The Indian company will own a majority 51 per cent in the proposed JV, with the balance 49 per cent owned by Ruyi. Reliance has a prominent presence in the Indian textile market, especially in the worsted and synthetic suiting fabric segments while Ruyi is a leading textile company in China with a global presence, including US, Europe, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, and a portfolio of world renowned brands. It also operates in India under the Georgia Gullini brand in the worsted suiting segment of the market. The business operation and activities would get realigned to strengthen the proposed joint venture.

The joint venture will build on Reliance’s existing textile business and wide distribution network in India as well as Ruyi’s state-of-the-art technology and global reach. The agreement will bring to Indian consumers some of the well-known brands of Ruyi. Ruyi has made investments in Japan, the UK and Australia in the recent past.

Reliance is India’s largest private sector company. It is India’s greenest and most environment-friendly company, ranking 185th among the world’s largest 500 companies. It is the first private sector company from India to feature in Fortune’s Global 500 list.

www.chinaruyi.com/doce/about/about.asp

The US has banned the import of clothing that contains benzidine-based dyes. These include DnPP, a phthalate used in PVC plastics, and alkanes C12-13, used as industrial lubricant. Benzidine is a synthetic chemical that does not occur naturally. It is a crystalline (sandy or sugar-like) solid that may be greyish-yellow, white, or reddish-grey in color. It will evaporate only slowly, especially from water and soil.

Benzidine and its related chemical substances are used to manufacture dyes. Benzidine-based dyes are used in the production of textiles, paints, printing inks, paper, and pharmaceuticals. They are also used as reagents and biological stains in laboratories, and have more recent uses in laser, liquid crystal displays, ink-jet printers, and electro-optical devices.

Exposure to benzidine-based dyes is of concern because benzidine dyes can be converted in the body into a chemical that is known to cause cancer. In the past, the industry used large amounts of benzidine to produce dyes for cloth, paper, and leather. Major US dye companies no longer make benzidine-based dyes. Benzidine is no longer used in medical laboratories or in the rubber and plastics industries. However, small amounts of benzidine may still be manufactured or imported for scientific research in laboratories or for other specialized uses.

One such event is Matchmaking Forum slotted for February 19 to 20, 2015. More than 2,000 Colombian companies from apparel, agribusiness, manufacturing and services will be showcasing their products. The forum presents several opportunities for entrepreneurs to diversify markets, take advantage of free trade agreements in force and get to know the diverse range of Colombian products. Registered buyers will be able to schedule one-on-one business meetings with Colombian exporters.

The event is expected to attract Caribbean buyers, from countries like the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago, Barbados and the Bahamas. Colombian exports to the Caribbean reached $449 million from January to October 2014. Another event that will take place in Colombia is Colombiatex, January 27 to 29, 2015. This is Colombia’s specialized apparel manufacturing trade show and will showcase active wear, outdoor wear, athletic and swim wear, casuals, denims and lifestyle brands.

Colombiatex is the most important business forum for this industry in Latin America. International buyers of raw materials, textiles, apparel, and full package items will have the opportunity to meet with 450 Colombian manufacturers. Both events are organised by Pro Colombia, a government agency.

colombiatex.inexmoda.org.co/en/

The Sultanate of Oman is in the process of reviving cotton cultivation in the country. The project started in 2013 and this year production is expected to be nearly three tonnes. The project aims at diversifying the sources of income of farmers and providing raw materials to processing plants. Other aims include: encouraging artisans to use local cotton, enhancing the value of locally produced goods and reviving the fledgling textile industry.

Cotton plantation was thriving in the Sultanate before the oil revolution changed its economy. Farmers in Oman stopped planting cotton due to lack of demand and low prices with an increase in competition from imported products after the sultanate opened its market. They shifted to cultivating other crops instead. The cotton project is also important as it ensures protection of genetic resources of local plants.

Omani cotton is a rare variety. It is resistant to diseases and has a natural brown color, which is rarely found in the world. The project has been funded by the Agricultural and Fisheries Development Fund and the ministry has collaborated with the Public Authority for Craft Industries to revive cultivation of this variety to supply raw material to local textile firms.

Cotton plantation gives good returns and the economies of many nations depend on cotton cultivation.

Parvez Mehta , a well known wool textile expert with nearly five decades of experience in the development of wool products and processes, is being honoured by the American Wool Council with the ‘Wool Excellence Award’. He has worked with the US wool textile industry in developing wool products like fire retardant wool products and in devising enzyme treatments on wool.

A degree holder in physics, chemistry and mathematics, Mehta joined the premier wool research and development unit of the International Wool Secretariat in 1967. Over a 16-year period at IWS, Mehta authored three books, seven patents and over 50 articles in technical journals. Mehta was president of Glenmoor Consultants, which involved work for three staple mills in the US. In that position he developed and introduced wool in a range of blended products.

Mehta has devoted his life to wool and made many contributions. Through his vast experience in wool, and commitment to wool, the US industry has realized many benefits. For two decades he has served as the go-to person relative to wool science and new product developments.

The Wool Excellence Award is sponsored by the Wool Roundtable, which includes representatives from various segments of the wool trade, such as wool research, buying, production, warehousing, processing and fabric manufacturing.

Cambodia will introduce a board for the silk industry. The National Silk Board (NSB) is an industry body that will work toward tightening regulations and boosting investor confidence in Cambodia’s silk industry. It will build networks between raw silk producers and silk product makers.

The Cambodian silk industry is considered significant to economic growth and it’s expected that once the NSB is established there will be a lot of funding to boost the sector. Cambodia’s natural silk industry is on the verge of extinction due to the widespread use of pesticides that have severely damaged the health of silkworms, leading producers to rely on imported synthetic fibers to meet the demand.

The production of golden silk, which is sourced from a silkworm, has decreased from 10 tonnes per year in 2008 to less than a tonne per year in 2014. Silkworms living in polluted environments produce poor quality silk and less of silk. Silkworms are affected by the smell of pesticides which farmers use in their fields.

Even a price increase of golden silk has not given producers with an incentive to remain in the industry. With the establishment of the National Silk Board, the Cambodian silk market is expected to expand and grow.

Once a vibrant sector, Uganda’s textile industry is in a crisis. The African country was a leading exporter of quality cotton until a few years ago, but its exports have dropped in recent years.

The industry is largely dominated by ginneries, estimated to be around 25 throughout the country, whose final product is just raw cotton. One of the reasons for lower production capacity as well as poor quality of Ugandan cotton is that the crop is mainly grown in areas that are not easily accessible. Only five per cent of the cotton grown in Uganda is utilized domestically, and the rest of it is exported, mainly in the raw form. This fetches a low economic value - which has discouraged many potential traders.

Cheap textile and clothing imports from China and Asia have flooded the domestic market, which has seriously injured the industry. This has resulted in the loss of productive capacity, factory closure, redundancy and retrenchment in some cases.

The sector is affected by lack of technically qualified and experienced personnel and lack of incentives to Ugandans to invest in the textile industry. There is also government reluctance to completely ban imports of second-hand clothes such as T-shirts, socks, under wear and counterfeit textile products.

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