Crude oil price and anti-dumping duty on polyester triggers fret for Surat we

Textile entrepreneurs from the country’s biggest man-made fabric (MMF) hub of Surat are concern over the rising crude oil price and imposing of the anti dumping duty on polyester yarn.

Rise in crude oil price in Asia due to continuous violence in Iraq, yarn manufacturers have increased the prices of yarn by Rs 4 per kilogram. While with the anti-dumping duty on polyester yarn, the basic raw material for Surat’s MMF sector, the local weavers in the powerloom sector has to heavily depend on domestic manufacturers.

Around 6.5 lakh powerloom machines weave more than 3 crore metre of fabric per day in the city. The textile traders in the biggest MMF hub sell around Rs 110 crore worth of fabrics, including finished saris, dress materials, home furnishing fabrics etc.

The rising crude oil prices and the Union Ministry of Commerce and Industry’s anti-dumping duty on Purified Terephthalic Acid (PTA) — a raw material derived from crude oil to manufacture yarn chips — are weighing heavy on Indian polyester industry. The levy was imposed on June 19.

Industry sources said that the crude oil price rise has a direct impact on the MMF industry. The polyester yarn prices are likely to increase in the coming days with local spinners finding it difficult to adjust the escalating cost of procuring the raw material required to manufacture the polyester yarn. This will have a cascading effect on MMF fabric prices with prices of saris and dress materials likely to witness an increase of at least 20 per cent.

The weaving sector in Surat is already facing problem over shortage of workers. With rise in crude oil prices the weavers will not be able to cope up with the rise in yarn prices. They only hope the crude oil prices will go down soon, or else the weaving sector will have to face tough days ahead, said Ashok Jirawala, president, Federation of Gujarat Weavers Association.

At present, the crude prices are between $115 to $120 per barrel and are likely to increase up to $200 per barrel with the Iraq crisis not likely to end soon. The weavers will have to pass on the price rise in polyester yarn to the textile traders, which in turn will make the finished fabrics like saris and dress materials costlier.

Recent Posts

Yanpai orders needlepunch lines from Andritz

Zhejiang Yanpai Filter Technology has placed a new order with Andritz for two additional high-performance needlepunch production lines.

3 days ago

Chinese textile group Sunrise to invest in Morocco

Sunrise has started building a textile factory in Morocco through its newly formed subsidiary, Euwen Textiles. Construction has begun in…

3 days ago

Tendam, UDIT study carbon impact of fashion e-commerce

Tendam, in partnership with the University of Design, Innovation and Technology, has released a new study examining the carbon footprint…

4 days ago

Mycelium-based insulation emerges as solution for fast-fashion waste

Researchers from Latvia have identified mycelium-based insulation as the most promising reuse option for fast-fashion textile waste.

4 days ago

Researchers turn PET waste into anti-cancer medicines

A breakthrough has revealed a new way to convert PET from plastic bottles and synthetic textiles into key components used…

4 days ago

India–New Zealand FTA to boost Indian textile exports

The proposed India–New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (FTA) is expected to significantly strengthen Indian exports.

5 days ago