Textile apparel sector increasingly going green
Textile apparel sector increasingly going green
More producers in the textile apparel sector are adopting measures for green and sustainable production to meet increasingly stringent requirements from trading partners, as well as create extra income sources.
To reach sustainable development targets, many countries and regions are enacting stringent requirements for importing products, forcing producers to obey environmental and sustainable development requirements, including the textile and apparel sector.
Pham Van Viet, chairman of Viet Thang Jean Co., Ltd., said that to break into demanding markets such as the United States and EU, it is currently a must for export producers to shift into green production.
At Viet Thang Jean, the company has entirely shifted into using high-tech applications to boost production as well as save the environment.
In the past, for denim products, the company had to use chemicals and pigments in the printing process.
Now, the firm has acquired laser printing technology to avoid doing harm to the environment.
One of its major investments $12.5 million in a process for producing 10,000 complete items, eight-time more in value compared to a conventional production line.
Similarly, Nguyen Huu Phuc, director of Fadatech JSC, said that the company uses bamboo fabric, or linen, which are deemed as environmentally friendly production materials that can be biodegradable after several years.
“As for technology, instead of using traditional methods with waste printing ink being discharged into the environment, we currently employ digital technology in printing, not using water, free from chemicals, dust and waste. After being printed, the fabric is dried and softened by heat-based and mechanical methods,” said Phuc.
Not only apparel firms, textile and material producers are also part of the trend. Many firms strive to adopt green and environmentally friendly production models that create many benefits when they join the global value chain.
Le Van Linh, head of Equipment Infrastructure division at Tran Hiep Thanh Textile Corporation, said that in 2019, the company discharged a total 57,783 tonnes of CO2 from production.
The company is committed to pulling down this volume by 29.4 per cent by 2026, despite its continual efforts for scope expansion.
Experts assume that many businesses have been aware of the benefits of going green in production, yet amid the current tough business climate with a sharp fall in order intake, investing into boosting production efficiency attached to environmental protection is causing difficulties for businesses.
Current solutions for many firms, therefore, are to make gradual investments with long-haul plans to smoothen the transformation process.