Initial and Tersus Solutions have partnered to deliver a unique water-free laundry program, the first of its kind in the European industrial laundry market. The patented, closed-loop Tersus barrier system cleans high value corporate work wear and personal protective equipment using liquid carbon dioxide instead of water. The cleaning service will extend the life of rental work wear and increase worker health and safety, while taking an important step toward a more resource-responsible circular economy for textiles in Europe.
Regulators in Europe and the United States are increasingly concerned about worker safety resulting from contaminants encountered during hazardous work assignments, including fire fighting. Without appropriate and timely cleaning, workers are at risk of secondary exposure to contaminants via their work wear.
Water-based cleaning has dominated textile manufacturing and maintenance for centuries despite some of its limitations for maintaining work wear. The fibers of high-value work wear degrade via aggressive mechanical action, harsh chemistry, and high temperatures associated with traditional cleaning and drying.
Tersus introduces a specialty solution that produces unparalleled cleanliness and decontamination for high-value work wear. Distinct from water, Tersus uses no heat and gentler mechanical action to reduce garment degradation, and ensure worker health. The water-free cleaning solution can guarantee fiber integrity, color fastness, and technical functionality while reducing the environmental impact of laundry.
Italdenim believes in sustainability, recycling and waste minimization.It has created the online recycled denim fabric made by regenerating production waste of cotton yarn, traced to fiber, yarn and dyed again.
In a normal cotton dyeing process, the first and the last 500 meters of a dyeing batch - dyed in the startup and shutdown of the machine - are normally discarded because the optimal color occurs when the machine is operating at full capacity.
Italdenim, based in Italy, thought instead of regenerating this yarn it would create a proposal that meets the needs of the most discerning customers to ecology and respect for the environment.
Recycled Denim consists of 100 per cent cotton fabrics (60 per cent recycled and 40 per cent new) and fabrics combining cotton with polyester fibers. These are obtained from the recycling of post-consumer plastic bottles collected in North Italy, a double recycling therefore that benefits the environment.
The full control of the entire recycling process, which starts from the yarn and not from the fabric, allows the company to certify that its regenerated denim is composed exclusively of cotton, or cotton and polyester, without the addition of other unidentified fibers, as often happens in the process of recycling materials.
The International Cotton Advisory Committee (ICAC) has announced Dr. Jack C. McCarty, of the USA, as the winner of its researcher of the year Award for 2016. The announcement was made during the World Cotton Research Conference-6, which was held in Goiânia, Brazil, from May 2 to 6.
Dr McCarty works for the Agricultural Research Service of the US Department of Agriculture and is also an adjunct professor at the Mississippi State University. He is an agronomist/breeder whose research concentrates on cotton’s genetic diversity, conversion of photoperiodic races to day neutrality and germ plasm enhancement for improving yield and fiber quality.
The ICAC started recognizing cotton researchers in 2009. Researchers from all areas of production research, including technology transfer, from ICAC members are eligible to apply. The program is open for application on February 1 each year and a winner, selected by a panel of five judges with no direct link to the ICAC, is announced on May 1.
The ICAC, based in the United States, provides statistics on world cotton production, consumption, trade and stocks and identifies emerging changes in the structure of the world cotton market. It serves as a clearing house for technical information about cotton and cotton textiles, serves as an objective forum for discussion of cotton matters of international significance and represents the international cotton industry before UN agencies and other international organizations.
ICA Bremen, founded in 2011, is an international centre of excellence for cotton testing, research and quality training. It’s at work on an inexpensive, full traceability system which will prove the authenticity of organic and other niche cottons.
More and more consumers want to be sure that the cotton product they have bought complies with their environmental and social expectations. Several cotton identity program, such as organic and niche cottons, try to assure the public of this via labeling, but the textile value added chain is very complex so this previously could not be accurately done.
ICA Bremen has conducted laboratory tests to demonstrate that garments can immediately be verified and quantified to confirm their authenticity at the click of a button, using a simple scanner from a hand held reader or via a scan on the production line.
And because there is no laboratory testing required, the associated time and cost of this is avoided - making this an inexpensive solution for the market.
The company has successfully proved the concept in laboratory trials and is now proceeding to full field trials. If successful, and dependent on funding and partners, the product could be available later this year.
Cambodia’s exports to Japanskyrocketed in the first quarter of the year thanks to the improvement in regional connectivity within the 10 Southeast Asian nations.
As per the latest data from the Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO), total exports from Cambodia reached almost $329 million in the first quarter of the year, a big increase of more than 34 percent, compared with $245 million in the same period last year.
According to Hiroshi Suzuki, CEO/Chief Economist for the Business Research Institute for Cambodia, the increase in items would be garment products and shoes. He said Cambodia has good advantages for the production of these items. The advantages are lower labor costs and improved logistical connections with Japan.
Products mainly Cambodia exported to Japan were garment products, footwear, sugar, fish and seafood, and the country imported machinery, cars, electronic products, meat, iron, steel and pharmaceutical products from Japan.
The Cambodia-Japan Association for Business and Investment (CJBI) was officially launched in late March to bring business groups in the two countries together. Now there are 250 Japanese companies that invest in Cambodia, while 222 companies enrolled in the association.
According to Joao Paulo Sabido Costa, Charge De’ Affairs of Portugal to Islamabad, his country is making efforts to enhance trade with Pakistan especially in the sector of textile, chemical industry, aeronautical, marble, dairy farming, agriculture and tourism.
He said that Portugal had softened the visa policy for students and the business community.The delegation of Portuguese parliamentarians under the chairmanship of Speaker Portugal Assembly in June, will meet President, Prime Minister, Speaker National Assembly and Pakistani parliamentarians.
Costa said that Pakistan had a fairly vast scope in tourism. The business councils of both the countries would arrange an exhibition of Pakistani products in Lisbon next month. Pakistani products have a good demand in Europe. Businessmen from Pakistan can participate in the exhibition as Portugal had a softer visa policy for the investors.
Costa admitted that the trade volume between the two countries was very meager but efforts were being made from both sides to lift it by the end of the current year.
Gap, the clothing retailer reported another quarter of declining sales recently, a sign of deepening trouble in its battle to keep up with fast fashion and online retailers.
The 47-year old apparel maker Gap, known for its trademark blue denim, khakis and other mostly youth-oriented looks, saw sales fall at all three its store brands: Gap, Banana Republic and Old Navy.
In the first quarter, sales fell 6.0 percent to $3.44 billion, with Banana Republic sinking the most at 11 percent. Old Navy, the group's cheapest line mostly aimed at children and teens, outperformed its sister chains for most of 2015.
Key challenges for all three though include toughened competition from H&M, Uniqlo and other fast fashion chains, as well as the headwinds from a broader tilt against brick-and-mortar stores as more shoppers go online.
A year ago Gap announced plans to cut 175 namesake stores in North America, pledged renewed focus to streamline its operations and whittle its presence internationally to the most promising markets.
According to chief executive Art Peck, the industry is evolving and they should transform at a faster pace, while focusing their energy on what matters most to their customers.Peck said more details would be revealed when the company reports earnings on May 19.
According to Rebecca Chiang, executive director, Malaysian Knitting Manufacturers Association (MKMA), Malaysia’s textile division will grow by at least 30 per cent, thanks to a surge of investment when the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement comes into force.
The trade deal’s ‘yarn forward’ rule makes it mandatory to use TPP member-country produced yarn for TPP-made textiles in order to be covered by the agreement’s market access benefits, and it means ‘downstream garment exporters need to consume local or TPP country’s fabrics, which will definitely benefit Malaysian knitters,’ says Chiang. Malaysia has proven to be the most enthusiastic TPP signatory country – on 27 January, the Malaysian parliament endorsed the deal, while many other national assemblies have yet to debate the agreement.
U.S. is an important market for Malaysia’s garment and textile exports. Malaysia currently ranks number nine in the list of top exporters to the US for woven men’s shirts and number 22 in the list of exporters of knitted men’s shirts, according to an analysis on the impact of TPP on the Malaysian textile and apparel industry undertaken by the MKMA. However, in terms of total exports of textiles and apparel products to the US, Malaysia ranks number 26. But with the TPP, Malaysia’s exports will increase. MKMA predicts 72.9 per cent textiles tariff lines, constituting 36.44 per cent of total exports [by TPP member countries] to the USA, will see duty elimination upon entry into force of the agreement. Without the TPP, only 11 per cent of tariffs or 0.9 per cent of total exports in these countries would be duty free.
"According to one estimate, Vietnam's textile exports will double in the decade from 2015 to 6 trillion yen ($55 billion). In addition to low labor costs, expected cuts in tariffs under the agreement are drawing textile companies to the emerging country."
Vietnam is emerging as a potential new world production center of textile products, as major global apparel makers are expanding their production in the Southeast Asian country.
Avery Dennison RBIS, a U.S. manufacturer of apparel labels and tags, and South Korean clothing maker Panko are building new plants in Vietnam, which is part of the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade liberalization pact among 12 Pacific Rim countries, including the U.S. and Japan.
According to one estimate, Vietnam's textile exports will double in the decade from 2015 to 6 trillion yen ($55 billion). In addition to low labor costs, expected cuts in tariffs under the agreement are drawing textile companies to the emerging country.
State-of-the-art label printers are rolling off paper tags for global apparel brands such as Nike and Adidas at Avery's brand-new plant in Long An Province in southern Vietnam. The plant, which came on stream in January, can print 10,000 tags per hour containing information like prices and materials used. Its production capacity is twice that of the old plant. The tags are then delivered to factories in the surrounding areas that mainly manufacture sports apparel.
According to Rishi Pardal, the company's vice president in charge of North Asia, Vietnam will replace China as the principal hub of textile exports to Western and Japanese markets.
Meanwhile, Panko is building a new plant in Quang Nam Province, central Vietnam, at a cost of $100 million. The company is responding to growing orders from global apparel brands, including Uniqlo. Choi Jae-ho, a director at Panko's local unit, said the company's sales increased 30 per cent last year and the outlook is for a similar expansion this year, too.
Incidentally, China is still the dominant player in Asia's apparel business, with a total export value of 30 trillion yen. The figure dwarfs India's annual apparel exports of slightly less than 5 trillion yen, the second largest in Asia.
But rising labour costs, which have doubled in five years, are threatening China's status as the regional champion. Textile exports from China fell last year for the first time in six years, signaling that apparel makers are looking to other countries with lower costs.
Clearly, Vietnam has the potential to become a serious challenger to China's supremacy in textile production and exports. In addition to low labor costs, which are nearly 60 per cent less than in China, the TPP, which is expected to come into force around 2018, will further enhance Vietnam's competitiveness.
The trade pact will, for instance, immediately scrap tariffs averaging 20 per cent on 70 per cent of the items Vietnam exports to the U.S. Vietnam's advantage as an exporter will receive an additional boost from its free trade agreement with the EU, which is pending ratification.
To gain the most benefits from the tariff cuts under the TPP, a country needs to have both upstream and downstream sectors. In the textile industry, that means Vietnam needs both spinning and dying as well as sewing businesses.
Huntsman Textile Effects, a division of Huntsman and a leading manufacturer of textile dyes and chemicals, is seeking to capitalise on new business opportunities in Vietnam created by the trade accord.
The company used to transport dyes for yarns and cloths from a warehouse in Thailand to Vietnam, which took two to three weeks to deliver products after receiving orders. But, last year, Huntsman opened its own bonded warehouse in Dong Nai Province in southern Vietnam, which cut delivery times down to as short as four business days.
Meanwhile, even though China has not joined the TPP, Chinese textile companies are also expanding their operations in Vietnam.
Texhong Textile Group, a major Chinese textile manufacturer, has spent 600 million yuan ($92.6 million) to build new production facilities on 220,000 sq. meters of land it purchased in Quang Ninh Province in northern Vietnam. In partnership with a Hong Kong-based knitwear manufacturer, the company is planning to build up integrated textile manufacturing and sales operations in the country, starting with yarn production.
According to Hong Tianzhu, Texhong's chairman, his company will seek to be the top player in Vietnam, which he describes as the biggest beneficiary of the TPP.
Shoe manufacturers are also expanding in Vietnam. Pou Chen of Taiwan, the world's largest contract manufacturer of footwear, which counts Nike and other major brands among its customers, made 42 per cent of its products in Vietnam as of the end of 2015, compared with 25 per cent in China.
But Vietnam is facing tough challenges in its quest to become a global textile giant: Minimum wages in the country are rising at double-digit rates, and its underdeveloped petrochemical industry is limiting production capacity.
If it wants to become the world's new textile plant, Vietnam needs to quickly upgrade its industrial structure while its textile exports still maintain price competitiveness.
Other Asian countries are also trying to benefit from the TPP. Since the trade deal was struck in October last year, Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines have announced their intention to join. These countries are clearly feeling pressure to keep up with their neighbors in global competition.
Foreign investment in Vietnam's textile industry totaled $5.7 billion in 2014-15, equal to nearly 70 per cent of the accumulated investment over the past 20 years. Such rapid growth cannot be attributed solely to the TPP, but the trade pact has no doubt been a major factor.
The situation poses a puzzle for Japanese textile makers operating in countries such as Thailand and Indonesia. They must decide whether to expand into Vietnam now or wait for its neighbors to join the TPP.
Bangladesh’s apparel export to the US market has seen a 4.30 per cent rise to $1.45 billion in the first quarter of current calendar year, despite the declining trend of overall apparel import by the United States from across the world.
Meanwhile, the overall apparel export to US from other countries has declined by 2.14 per cent to $19.30 billion, which was $19.72 billion in the same period a year ago.
As per the January-March data of the Office of Textiles and Apparel (OTEXA), US Department of Commerce, Bangladesh earned $1.45 billion, exporting clothing products to the US market, which is 4.30 per cent higher compared to $1.40 billion a year ago.
However, the volume posted an 8.38 per cent growth to 517.63 million square meters equivalent (SME) to the same period that indicates the unit prices of apparel products made in Bangladesh have seen a fall.In the same period last year, the volume was 477.62 million SME.
Meanwhile, the overall RMG import by the US increased by 4.14 per cent to $5.60 billion with an 11.93 per cent rise compared to $5 billion in the same period a year ago.
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