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 » Mills SOS to Textiles Minister
Industry Update

Mills SOS to Textiles Minister

By October 17, 20161 Min Read
Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Copy Link
As the cotton season (October 2015 to September 2016) comes to an end and cotton prices have shot up to nearly Rs 50,000 a candy, textile industry associations from different parts of the country met the Union Textile Minister Smriti Irani in New Delhi.
The associations sought announcement of cotton fibre security policy by the Union Government. Cotton is the main raw material for the textile industry and cotton prices, which were Rs 33,000 a candy, increased to Rs. 55,000 a candy in July this year. The spinning mills incur Rs 20 to Rs 25 a kg loss and this has been the situation for the last three months. Many mills have hence cut down production. Downstream industries, including powerlooms, handlooms, and apparel, are also hit because of the increase in cotton prices.
The textile industry is facing crisis for the last eight years now and volatility in cotton prices is one of the reasons for this, the associations pointed out. Spinning mills have not option but to buy cotton at high costs as banks extend only three-month credit limit facility.
Previous ArticleMills SOS to Textiles Minister
Next Article Mega textile job fair planned in Mysuru

Related Posts

India eyes larger UK textile share after FTA

June 27, 2026

Textiles Ministry eyes $100 billion exports

June 27, 2026

N D Mhatre honoured with Certificate of International Excellence

June 25, 2026
Recent Posts
  • India eyes larger UK textile share after FTA
  • Textiles Ministry eyes $100 billion exports
  • Indian heritage to shine at 19th HGH India as traditional crafts connect with the industry
  • ITMA 2027 gains momentum as emerging innovators take the global stage
  • VIRGIO bets on made-on-demand fashion to build a global demand-led brand
  • HKRITA signs MoU with Jeanologia and Looptworks to establish green machine circular textile ecosystem
  • Underneat strengthens its position among India’s fastest-growing D2C brands
  • Karl Mayer: The fastest path from yarn to champion shoe
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.