Close Menu
Indian Textile Journal
  • Home
  • Market and Economy
    • Apparels & Garments
    • Fibres & Raw Materials
    • Home Textiles
    • Industry Update
  • Textile Machinery
    • Allied Equipment and Accessories
    • Automation
    • Dyeing, Processing & Finishing
    • Knitting
    • Printing
    • Spinning
    • Weaving
  • Tech Textiles
  • Sustainability
  • Resources
    • Trade Fair
    • Events
    • Videos
  • Interview & Opinion
  • Subscribe Now
  • Advertise
  • Digital
Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
Indian Textile Journal
Epson
  • Home
  • Market and Economy
    • Apparels & Garments
    • Fibres & Raw Materials
    • Home Textiles
    • Industry Update
  • Textile Machinery
    • Allied Equipment and Accessories
    • Automation
    • Dyeing, Processing & Finishing
    • Knitting
    • Printing
    • Spinning
    • Weaving
  • Tech Textiles
  • Sustainability
  • Resources
    • Trade Fair
    • Events
    • Videos
  • Interview & Opinion
  • Subscribe Now
  • Advertise
  • Digital
Indian Textile Journal
Home » BTMA drives global growth and future UK leadership
Industry Update

BTMA drives global growth and future UK leadership

Divya SBy Divya SMay 12, 20263 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Copy Link

As one of a number of new initiatives launched this year, the British Textile Machinery Association (BTMA) is launching the UK-India Textile Machinery Coalition.

The UK-India Free Trade Agreement, signed in July 2025, has implications that extend across sourcing, competitiveness and long-term trade dynamics, believes Jason Kent, CEO, BTMA.

“At its core, this deal removes or reduces tariffs on the vast majority of clothing and home textiles, with duties of around 8-12 per cent on Indian exports to the UK effectively eliminated,” he explains. “This gives Indian manufacturers significantly improved price competitiveness in one of the world’s most valuable consumer markets.”

For the BTMA’s manufacturers of textile machinery it also has strategically important benefits, he adds.

“India is one of the world’s largest textile producers and continues to invest heavily in modernising its mills – from spinning and weaving through to finishing. Improved trade terms, including reduced tariffs and clearer market access conditions, make it easier for UK machinery suppliers to compete in this expanding market.”

The official launch of the UK-India Textile Machinery Coalition took place on May 8th at the India ITME Centre in Mumbai.

Home opportunities

Back in the UK, the BTMA has launched the Future Leaders Committee (FLC) aimed at high-potential, mid-career professionals within its member companies.

The FLC programme is being structured to develop leadership, governance and strategic capability through formal training and enable its members to gain exposure to industry-wide challenges and opportunities, while acting as an advisory committee providing fresh perspectives and future-focused insight to the organisation.

In further support to companies, the BTMA Industry Placement Bursary Scheme is designed to support member companies in taking on student placement graduates and apprentices, while strengthening the future skills pipeline of the textile machinery and services sector.

The new Curious about Textiles short course has meanwhile been developed to support new BTMA member company entrants as well as a refresher to others in this vibrant sector of the industry.

“We need to ensure we are doing enough to support the future of the industry, not just commercially, but in terms of people, skills and leadership,” Jason Kent concludes. “The course is now fully developed and has been curated directly from the expertise of our members. We’ll be running a two-day pilot in early June at the BTMA offices in Manchester and then rolling it out more broadly to our membership in the autumn. It’s heavily subsidised by BTMA, so participation for our member organisations is very affordable. Please contact us directly for further information and let’s work together to support the exciting future for UK-made textile technologies.”

Previous ArticleCabinet clears Rs 56.59 billion Mission for Cotton Productivity to boost output by 2031
Next Article UK–India textile machinery corridor launched in Mumbai

Related Posts

RSWM retains IND A rating as outlook turns stable

June 12, 2026

Meenakshi India reports FY26 revenue at Rs 1.58 billion

June 9, 2026

Training undergraduate and school students in textiles research

June 9, 2026
Recent Posts
  • RSWM retains IND A rating as outlook turns stable
  • Mumbai welcomes back HGH India 2026
  • Vipul Organics teams up with OMYA for European pigment distribution
  • ITM Istanbul 2026: ColorJet’s visibility extends across the entire exhibition
  • CMAI kidswear fair sees record participation 
  • Clean energy shift may save Tamil Nadu textiles Rs 32.50 billion
  • Spykar plans pan-India offline expansion with 100 new stores in two years
  • Meenakshi India reports FY26 revenue at Rs 1.58 billion
Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

SISTER PUBLICATIONS

Construction World Equipment India Industrial Product Finder Infrastructure Today

© 2026 Indian Textile Journal. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.