Organic certification made mandatory for finished textile products

Raw cotton export already required certification under the National Programme for Organic Production (NPOP). It is now required of any finished textile product exported as an organic one such as yarn, fabrics, made-ups and garments as the government has made it mandatory.

R K Dalmia, Chairman, The Cotton Textiles Export Promotion Council said that national standard for organic cotton is a welcome move but the manner in which it is being implemented will create havoc in the organic textile industry and lead to loss of export business.

Textile exporters have urged the government to extend the NPOP certification deadline by at least a year, to allow the export industry to adapt in a realistic timeframe, without hampering current export.

Dalmia noted the Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority is yet to give official recognition to the certifying bodies.

Buyers are insisting on certificates issued under the global organic textile standard. This is also specified in the letter of credits and contracts. In view of this, not only the exporter but also the importers (buyers) need to understand and accept the changes in certification procedures. This would also require additional time. At a time when export of textiles is sluggish and there is a widening trade deficit.

However, adequate time needs to be ensured for both exporters and importers to adjust and adopt the new procedural requirements, especially at the time when exports of textiles is slow-moving and a wide trade deficit has been formed.

But with the increasing labour costs in China, non-compliance with a large number of factories in Bangladesh, the high rate of inflation and currency appreciation in competing countries have provided India a big opportunity in relative advantage.

According to the Apparel Export Promotion Council (AEPC) data, there has been cumulative growth of 17.6 percent in export to $8.3 billion over April-September, the first six months of this financial year, over the same period in 2013-14.

Recent Posts

Stella McCartney x H&M collection uses plant-based innovative textile

A snakeskin-print bomber jacket from the new Stella McCartney x H&M Spring 2026 collection marks the debut of BioFleax, a…

21 hours ago

Philippines opens banana fiber textile innovation hub

The Department of Science and Technology, through the Philippine Textile Research Institute, has launched a P6 million Natural Textile Innovation…

21 hours ago

Kornit Digital launches Atlas Matrix printing platform

Kornit Digital has officially launched its Atlas Matrix platform following a global beta testing program, expanding the company’s digital printing…

21 hours ago

Panda Biotech, Culturewell launch India’s first integrated hemp supply chain

Panda Biotech has announced the launch of India’s first fully integrated hemp fiber-to-yarn supply chain ecosystem in partnership with Culturewell…

4 days ago

Avery Dennison, ReCircled pilot demonstrates automated garment sorting

Avery Dennison and ReCircled have completed a pilot project showing that RFID technology can automate garment data collection and sorting…

4 days ago

Researchers to treat textile wastewater using sunlight-powered technology

Researchers at University of Birmingham have developed ultra-thin “2D” photocatalysts using a water-based manufacturing process.

5 days ago