The industry has been able to withstand the testing times
during the pandemic wherein despite the global demand being stagnant, Chairman
of the Apparel Export Council NarenGoenka said. He was addressing 44th
annual general meeting of the Council.
The Apparel Export promotion council has been
playing an instrumental role by extending an exclusive support to the Apparel
industry of India for enhancing its Global reach. AEPC
has taken upon itself to take the existing exports of 16-17 to 40 billion US
dollars by 2030.â€
Various steps initiated by the council to increase
exports include an in-house Market Intelligence Cell to keep the track of
trends in import demands forecasted for 2030 and the efforts have been taken at
various fronts to hand hold the industry on two fronts. Focusing on
strengthening our core strength in our traditional exports of cotton by
promoting Kasturi cotton and traceability systems with the support from
TEXPROCIL.
Handholding the industry for a gradual shift
to newer areas of technical
textiles, MMF and new product categories including workwear, uniforms, which
are high on demand in the international market. Appreciating the fact that
our exports have been primarily concentrated to EU & USA, AEPC has been
taking various steps to help the industry to diversify its focus to new
emerging markets of FTA countries including Australia and UAE and also Latin
America and Africa by shifting the focus of our trade events to emerging
markets under MAI, conducting webinars and capacity building programs,
Enhancing FDI to increase economies of scale
is very important for India’s export competitiveness in the Ready Made Garments
sector: Currently, the
apparel industry receives a very low level of FDI investment though 100%
FDI is allowed in the textile sector under the automatic route. Bringing
investment in the garment sector to realize its full potential is the focus of
the council.†To reach the target, we
will need to; focus on Innovation to cut cost and faster clearances, expand
our market and product basket, bridge the product mismatch, adopt cluster-based
model, bring investment in the garment sector, enhance branding efforts,
harness potential of e- commerce and FTAs, practice sustainability and
responsible business practices, foster strategic partnerships, etc. he added.
The council has requested the Textiles
Ministry to extend the ROSCTL scheme for a minimum period of three years. This scheme has helped the Apparel
Industry immensely to plan the business on a consistent basis while staying competitive.
Now that the market sentiments have touched an all-time low and the traditional
markets of USA & EU are facing unprecedented recessionary trends, the
extension of this scheme beyond 31st March, 2024 has become a dire necessity.
He said that PM MITRA and PLI Scheme will help the textiles sector immensely.