India Defends Textile Recycling Ecosystem Against Global Criticism

0
111

India’s Ministry of Textiles has defended the country’s textile recycling industry against what it described as misleading portrayals by sections of the international media, asserting that India has built one of the world’s largest textile recovery and recycling ecosystems supported by long-standing reuse and repurposing practices.

The ministry said recent foreign media reports focusing on textile recycling hubs such as Panipat highlighted environmental and labour-related concerns while overlooking the sector’s progress in sustainability, technology adoption and regulatory compliance.

Rejecting broad criticism of the industry, the government said India’s textile recycling sector is increasingly moving towards cleaner production systems, formalisation and stronger environmental safeguards. “Generalised characterisation of India’s textile industry as environmentally negligent or exploitative does not reflect the ongoing improvements and sustainability-led interventions taking place across the sector,” the ministry stated.

According to government data, India generates around 7,073 kilo tonnes of textile waste annually. Citing the Mapping of Textile Waste Value Chain in India 2026 study, the ministry said nearly 97 percent of pre-consumer textile waste generated during manufacturing is recycled within the country.

The government also pushed back against claims that India serves primarily as a destination for discarded Western fast-fashion products. It said more than 90 per cent of the nearly 7.8 million tonnes of textile waste processed annually is generated domestically, while imported waste contributes only about 7 percent.

Referring to a report by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, the ministry said India’s textile waste management ecosystem generates an estimated economic value of around Rs 22,000 crore each year.

The government further cited a study conducted by researchers at Indian Institute of Technology Delhi based on data from the Panipat textile cluster, which found that textile recycling can reduce environmental impacts such as greenhouse gas emissions and fossil fuel depletion by up to 40 percent compared to virgin fibre production.

While acknowledging concerns related to informal recycling units, worker safety and post-consumer waste management, the ministry said textile recycling facilities operate under existing environmental and labour regulations. It added that authorities, including the National Green Tribunal, continue to monitor and take action against non-compliant units.

Buscar
Categorías
Read More
Fashion Media & Publications
Kazakhstan Partners With China For US$ 360 Million Integrated Cotton-Textile Cluster
Kazakhstan is accelerating efforts to build a self-reliant textile industry through a new $360...
By Apparel Resources 2026-05-07 11:06:29 0 115
Fashion Media & Publications
Aditya Birla Group Showcases Technical Textiles Portfolio at Techtextil 2026 Frankfurt
Aditya Birla Group presents unified technical textiles portfolio for global markets The Aditya...
By Textile Value Chain 2026-04-30 05:56:23 0 626
Fashion Media & Publications
Under Armour Joins U.S. Cotton Trust Protocol To Strengthen Sustainable Sourcing
The U.S. Cotton Trust Protocol has announced that Under Armour, Inc. (NYSE: UA, UAA) has joined...
By Textile Insights 2026-04-27 07:38:39 0 324
Fashion Media & Publications
Government Plans Identification of 100 Products for Domestic Manufacturing Expansion
DPIIT outlines local manufacturing strategy, quality initiatives, and sector-focused production...
By Textile Value Chain 2026-05-16 05:53:34 0 197
Circularity, Sustainability & Waste Management
Создаем идеальные зоны отдыха — компания СИВАС
Компания «СИВАС» — это команда экспертов, предлагающая профессиональные услуги,...
By Ivan Popov 2026-04-18 04:54:55 0 206