Showing posts with label textile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label textile. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

International Machinery Exhibition of Garment & Textile Technology Pakistan 2011, is scheduled from 3-5 March, 2011

The show will be held with the support of Ministry of Textiles and major trade associations related to the industry. Last edition showcased machinery and technology of more than 300 companies represented by 29 countries and was attended by more than 9,000 business professionals affiliated with the textile and garment industry.

A high profile 4th International Technical Textiles Conference is being held in partnership with Textile Institute of Pakistan on 4th and 5th of March, 2011. The Conference is receiving an overwhelming response and will feature a unique portfolio of leading textile industry players as well as research institutions and academia professors.

These eminent speakers will disseminate new knowledge about innovative use of Technical Textiles in various applications; particularly the materials that can provide easy to deploy emergency shelters, clothing, construction, safety/protection, medical, filtration, transport and agriculture.

MEGATECH 2011 will also organise a ‘Knowledge Village – Pavilion’ for leading local textile research and development universities/institutes to display their research projects.

This year more than 100 local and international machinery manufacturers from China, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Korea, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, U.A.E. & U.S.A. will be participating at MEGATECH Pakistan 2011. The exhibition will continue its tradition to attract more than 10,000 key visitors from all the major textile cities of Pakistan.

The increasing imports of textile and garment machinery substantiate the need for exhibitions such as MEGATECH, which is a comprehensive platform for display of the latest and innovative technology for the textile and garment industry.

MEGATECH Pakistan 2011

Monday, January 10, 2011

Sunman Group sets up largest home textile plant in Bangladesh

Sunman Group said Saturday it is setting up the country's largest home textile plant to grab new-found opportunities in the European Union's four billion dollars bed-sheet and curtain market.

The clothing-to-beverage maker is investing more than eight billion taka in a state-of-the-art plant at Iswardi export processing zone, which will go into operation mid-2012, its CEO said.

"We have bought 57 plots covering a third of the Ishwardi EPZ. Some 70 per cent of the civil work has been completed," said Shafiqur Rahman, the Chief Executive Officer of the group.

The plant will have a capacity to produce 100,000 yards of bed sheet and curtains a day, making it the country's largest home textile manufacturers.

The investment has been fast-tracked after the EU last month relaxed its import rules, allowing products with 30 per cent value addition to get duty-free access in the world's second largest clothing market.

Earlier a manufacturer had to add at least 60 per cent value in Bangladesh to get free market access to the highly-lucrative market.

Rahman said the $4 billion EU market is their prime target but products of the new facility will also be shipped to the US, Japan and Australia.

The factory will manufacture all kinds of home textile under one roof. It will make yarn from imported raw cotton and then weave it into fabrics such as bed sheet, cushion cover, decorative pillow and curtain.

Sunman's CEO said the nearly $200 million group went ahead with the investment despite acute shortages of gas and energy in the country.

"The EPZ authority has assured us of supplying power and gas once we go into production in mid-2012," he said.

General Manager of the EPZ, situated 220 kilometre north-west from Dhaka, said the massive Sunman plant has changed the once-staid atmosphere at the industrial park.

Launched in 2000-1, the country's eighth EPZ had to wait five years to see its first investment. Since then it has wooed a few top names including Rahmafrooz's 25 million dollars automotive battery plant.

Experts said the latest investment in home textile would make Bangladesh one of the top players in global bed sheets and cover markets.

Presently, Pakistan is the largest home textile exporter, both in the key US and the EU. Islamabad exported 685 million euro worth of home textile in EU in 2009, followed by Turkey worth 600 million euro.

Bangladesh with an annual shipment of 185 million dollar is also a top-five exporter in the EU. "We shall be in the race for top position once our plant goes into production," said Rahman.

Textile millers said political and security problems in Pakistan have forced many buyers to search new import destinations with Bangladesh drawing most attention because of its low-cost labour.

"We've abundant cheap labour and our workers also learn quickly -- the ideal conditions for home textile growth," former Bangladesh Textile Mills Association president Abdul Hye Sircar said.

Mr Hye said: "This is an area where profit is guaranteed as China is becoming costly and Pakistan has been in troubles for some time."

Sunman's project, named Sunman Industrial Corporation, is being funded by a consortium of local financial institutions led by One Bank.

The banks are financing 60 per cent of project outlay while the company is investing the rest from its own coffer.

Zillul Hye Razi, trade adviser of European Commission's trade delegation in Dhaka, said the EU's relaxed import rules would boost Dhaka's home textile export to the 27-nation economic block.

According to new EU rules of origin (ROO), Bangladeshi companies can be able to export homes textiles by sourcing fabrics from a third country.

"All an exporter needs is to dye and complete the products here under the new ROO, which became effective from first day of the new-year," Razi said.

"I think this is the right time for Bangladeshi entrepreneurs to invest in the sector," he added. "There is also huge export potentials in the US market."

Nurul Islam, chairman of Noman Group -- the country's largest home textile maker -- said arrival of a new player will enhance competitiveness and raise Dhaka's global market share.

"It will create new challenges and opportunities for us," Islam said, adding in the short-term the country may face shortage of skilled labour.

At present, Bangladesh has only eight export-oriented home textile mills: seven in the greater Dhaka district and one in the port city of Chittagong.

Noman Group exports around 20 million US dollars worth of home textile each month. Other producers include Alltex, ACS Textile, Sad Musa, Regent, JK Group and Classical Home.

Source: The Financial Express, Bangladesh