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 » Cotton museum in offing
Industry Update

Cotton museum in offing

By January 4, 20172 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Copy Link
Globally, cotton is losing its share in textile manufacturing because of the stiff competition it faces from polyester and other manmade fibres. In order to arrest the declining trend of cotton consumption, countries like USA, Australia, Brazil, etc have effective demand enhancement programmes. Revealing this during the AGM of the Cotton Association of India recently, its outgoing President, Dhiren N Sheth said: “After years of hard work, research and planning, we also embarked on the generic promotion of cotton and as a medium, we chose School Contact Programmes (SCP), one of my dream projects….We have successfully completed the pilot of the SCP.”
He added: “We also undertook a programme for promotion of Suvin cotton, which is arguably the best cotton in the world and considered to be the ‘Jewel of Indian cottons’. Our Association developed a brand named Suvin Ratna under which shirting material made out of Suvin Cotton was introduced to cater to the gifting needs of the members of the Association. This has received overwhelming response.”
In order to showcase the rich and varied heritage of India’s cotton, CAI has started in right earnest its plan of establishing a cotton museum of international standard like the one in Egypt. CAI has already completed a fair amount of spadework and the museum is at an advance stage of implementation.
Previous ArticleGSP benefits Cambodian exports
Next Article Creora Activewear Trends for 2018

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.