Tuesday, 21 February 2006

Global Textile and Clothing Trade Environment: Challenges and Growth Opportunities

Global Textile and Clothing Trade Environment: Challenges and Growth Opportunities
লিখেছেন Shafiul Islam   
Thursday, 02 July 2009
উত্সর্গঃ সৃস্টির সেবক, রেডিও আবিস্কারক স্যার জগদীশ চন্দ্র বসু - যার স্পর্শে পৃথিবী ধন্য!

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TOPIC: Global Textile and Clothing Trade Environment: Challenges and Growth Opportunities
Dr. Shafiul A. Islam, CText FTI
The ripples of globalization, trade liberalization and the quota-free era seem to reshape our new textile economy and weave a promising global social fabric. How we integrate to the new textile economy from low-cost competitions to changing markets with extreme economic inequality is a challenging opportunity to ensure the stability, prosperity and security of our future.

With abundance of cheap workforce and high quality jute fibre, Bangladesh's Textiles and Clothing (T&C) sector, accounting for 76% of the total export earnings, offers competitive growth potential in the free-for-all mall. Bangladesh has only 2.6% of global market share and aims to increase its export volume to US$ 10 billion in the near future. As an LDC origin, Bangladeshi T&C products enjoy duty free access to Canada, Australia, Japan and Norway.

Economics of Exploitations
The global textile and Clothing (T&C) trade is estimated at approximately US $1 billion a day. Our passion for fashion is woven in Bangladesh at less than US $0.25 hourly wage, in Canada at US$13.59, in the US at US $15.13, and in Switzerland at US $24.12. Bangladesh offers the cheapest workforce with unique growth potential. Asia, led by China and India, has the largest textile economy and workforce. Low-cost competitions and a natural phenomenon that a product will find a profitable place are expanding developing countries' textile industries exponentially.

Eco-friendly Textiles
The growing environmental concerns seem to reinforce our choice for eco-friendly process-product-technology and diversify natural and synthetic fibres. The advancement in science and technology, especially biotechnology, has led to sophisticated natural organic fibres with superior properties, high yields, and design value-

Table 1. Raw cotton: actual & projected production/mill consumption & export/import

Actual Average per Year 000 tons Projected 000 ton Growth Rates % per Year

1989-1991 1999-2001 2010 1989-91 to 1999-01 1999-01 to 2010

Prod Cons Prod Cons Prod Cons Prod Cons Prod Cons
World 19 030 18 629 19 901 19 824 23 095 23 107 0.4 0.6 1.5 1.5
Developing 12 382 12 516 13 099 15 619 16 160 18 930 0.6 2.2 2.1 1.9
Developed 6 648 6 406 6 803 4 316 6 935 4 177 0.2 -3.9 0.2 -0.3

Exports Imports Exports Imports Exports Imports Exports Imports Exports Imports
World 5 686 5 719 6 049 6 007 6 530 6 646 0.6 0.5 0.8 1.0
Developing 2 284 2 940 1 961 4 131 2 108 4 743 -1.5 3.5 0.7 1.4
Developed 3 189 2 800 4 066 1 876 4 422 1 903 2.5 -3.9 0.8 0.1

Source: ICAC Bulletin (CD-ROM) June 2002. Compilation: TTS. 
Table 1 compares global cotton production, mill consumption, exports and imports scenario from 1989 and forecast to 2010 with average growth rate per year. China, US and India are the top three cotton producers. The mixing, blending (e.g. Jutton) and hybrid configurations (e.g. unidirectional epoxy impregnated composites) of natural and synthetic fibres will enhance performance-properties interrelationships. We foresee more environmental friendly natural fibres (e.g. Jute, Flax, Coir, Banana fibres), natural dyestuffs and chemicals to colour our passion for fashion.

The Power of Innovations
Imagine a wide variety of naturally coloured cotton produced like today's yellow watermelon to skip expensive dyeing and finishing processes. Think what a cost-effective gain it would be to design eco-friendly process-product-technology with biocompatible, biostable and biodegradable fibres. A Canadian biotechnology company envisioned spinning recombinant spider silk fibre, BioSteel and invented a micro-spinning technology that could spin fine micro-suture filaments from as little as 20 L spin solution. The results showed promise and demanded further research to examine polymer consistency, cost-effectiveness and commercial reality.

Trends and Tendencies
Developing countries export more clothing than textiles, as clothing is relatively more labour-intensive to produce and labour is comparatively abundant domestically. Conversely, these countries import more textiles than clothing as textiles are relatively capital-intensive and capital is relatively scarce domestically. Industrialized countries export more of this capital-intensive textile than they do apparel, and import more of this labour-intensive clothing than they do textiles. Facing the future, they are turning to technically advanced textiles. 


Global average per capita fibre consumption is approximately 10 kg per annum. Global fibre production hit 67 million metric tons in 2004. DRA estimates that the consumption of technical textiles around the world will be 23 million tons per annum by 2010. Mobiltech, Indutech and Sporttech will capture 55-57% of the technical textiles market share. T&C sectors will continue to lose market shares to offshore low-cost suppliers. Developing countries will increase their market shares unless extreme global inequality and unfair free-trade pacts are eradicated. Only then could a promising global textile economy be woven.

Canada imported 60% of textiles and 62% of clothing in 2004, while Canada-made textile and apparel satisfied 70% of the domestic demand in 1989. Facing this reality, Canada will launch a new program, the Transformative Technologies Program, which will share Canadian industries' costs of innovation and technology adoption projects. Its goal is to ensure that leading-edge industrial research continues to grow and that Canadian companies are competitive in the global economy.

Demands and Dynamics
Technically advanced textile sectors seem to grow immensely as our quest for a better quality of life continues. The labour-intensive T&C sectors count on continual capital investment, upgrading knowledge and technology to further innovations, productivity and competitiveness. Investment, training, innovations and continual improvement visions are crucial to create a competitive niche market and high performance work environment.

Fast-paced globalization and trade liberalization have forced labour intensive textile industries to knit cross-cultural business for exploiting global market potential. The textile fibre industries will continue to shift, incrementally, to the cheap labour-intensive developing areas of Asia, Africa/Middle East and Latin America, from the advanced countries, in order to capitalize on competitive cost advantages.

Innovations proliferate at every phase of the textile supply chain, from upstream fibre production to final products. The primary market drivers of change are: innovation in fiber performance, comfort, aesthetic characteristics and smart functional textiles. Next-generation high-tech artificial fibres will continue to provide cost-effective solutions to specialized applications.

Technical/industrial textiles represent a significant portion of the total textile activity in North America. It accounted for 30% of end-use fibre consumption in the region (around 3.5 million metric tons) and was worth $17 billion in 2000. Because of the industry's strong growth and demanding technical requirements, many segments offer long-term market potential.
Enhancing performance, customer satisfaction and quality baselines continually are instrumental to staying competitive and innovative. Integrating interdisciplinary innovations will advance multifunctional textile process-product-technology design. Total solution strategies, service & technology systems, and continual learning attitudes are crucial to develop cross-cultural business and long-term partnerships in the new textile economy.

Dr. Shafiul Islam, CText FTI, is the President, the Institute of Textile Science (textilescience.ca), and a consultant of TexTek Solutions (textek.weebly.com). Reach him at textek@gmail.com.

ছবি: কবির হোসেন, প্রথম আলো
প্রকাশিত: প্রথম আলো, ছুটির দিন, দূর পরবাসে ০১, ১৮ ফেব্রুয়ারী ২০০৬
সৌজন্য: scholarsbangladesh.com
 
Picture Link
http://www.scholarsbangladesh.com/journal/topic/s_t_details.php
 
Article Link

Global Textile and Clothing Trade Environment: Challenges and Growth Opportunities : http://biggani.com/content/view/1205/158/

সৌজন্যেTexTek Solutions ::  Vision Creates Value
 
শফিউল ইসলাম

ইমেইল: shafiul_i@yahoo.com   :: ওয়েবঃ textek.weebly.com :: Canada :: www.linkedin.com/in/shafiul2009 

মন্তব্যগুলো (2)Add Comment
Global Textile and Clothing Trade Environment: Challenges and Growth Opportunities
লিখেছেন salmaAkter, July 14, 2009
Great like your works !
Global Textile and Clothing Trade Environment: Challenges and Growth Opportunities
লিখেছেন Shafiul Islam, August 30, 2009
Thanks
:)
Shafiul

Saturday, 18 February 2006

ড. শফিউল ইসলাম : বাংলাদেশে কাজ করার সুযোগ অনেক

ড. শফিউল ইসলাম : বাংলাদেশে কাজ করার সুযোগ অনেক 


লিখেছেন ইকবাল হোসাইন চৌধুরী   
Friday, 30 March 2007
 
[PDF ফাইল
 
লেখক: ইকবাল হোসাইন চৌধুরী
ছবি: কবির হোসেন, প্রথম আলো
প্রকাশিত: প্রথম আলো, ছুটির দিন, দূর পরবাসে ০১, ১৮ ফেব্রুয়ারী ২০০৬
সৌজন্য: scholarsbangladesh.com



ড. শফিউল ইসলাম : বাংলাদেশে কাজ করার সুযোগ অনেক

November 6, 2010

এই সাক্ষাত্কার দিয়ে প্রথম আলো'র 'দূর পরবাসে' পর্বের অগ্রযাত্রা শুরু
প্রথম আলো :: ২♥♥৬ ফেব্রুয়ারী ১৮

সৌজন্যেTexTek Solutions ::  Vision Creates Value

শফিউল ইসলাম
ইমেইল:   shafiul_i@yahoo.com :: ওয়েবঃ textek.weebly.com :: Canada :: www.linkedin.com/in/shafiul2009

Sunday, 25 December 2005

Textile and Apparel Trade: What's Next in 2006 and Beyond?

Textile and Apparel Trade: What's Next in 2006 and Beyond?

লিখেছেন Shafiul Islam   
Saturday, 01 December 2012
সর্গঃ সৃস্টির সেবক, রেডিও আবিস্কারক স্যার জগদীশ চন্দ্র বসু - যার স্পর্শে পৃথিবী ধন্য!
Textile and Apparel Trade: What's Next in 2006 and Beyond, S Islam, The Textile Journal, Nov-Dec, 2005, 122 (6) 28-32
প্রকাশিত: The Textile Journal, Nov-Dec, 2005, 122 (6) 28-32
শফিউল ইসলাম
ইমেইল: shafiul_i@yahoo.com   :: ওয়েবঃ textek.weebly.com :: Canada :: www.linkedin.com/in/shafiul2009

Wednesday, 19 October 2005

Coated and Laminated Textiles

Coated and Laminated Textiles

ITS 99th Scientific Session: 'Coated and Laminated Textiles', Kingston, 19 October 2005

The Institute of Textile Science Canada is inviting guest speakers for the forthcoming scientific sessions.

Contacts:

Shafiul A. Islam, PhD, CText FTI, T: 613 632 4090,
E: shafiul@textilescience.ca

Darko Medved, T: 866 695 3922
E: darko@textilescience.ca

Jerry Bauerle, T: 905 822 411 Ext.493, F: 905 823 1446
E: jerry@textilescience.ca



Coated and Laminated Textiles: http://textilescience.ca/sessions_99th.html

সৌজন্যেTexTek Solutions ::  Vision Creates Value

শফিউল ইসলাম
ইমেইল:   shafiul_i@yahoo.com :: ওয়েবঃ textek.weebly.com :: Canada :: www.linkedin.com/in/shafiul2009

Friday, 15 July 2005

Value-added Textile Technology

Value-added Textile Technology

 | টেক্সটাইল | লিখেছেন  | Leave a reply
 
Saturday, 25 December 2010


সর্গঃ সৃস্টির সেবক, রেডিও আবিস্কারক স্যার জগদীশ চন্দ্র বসু - যার স্পর্শে পৃথিবী ধন্য!

Value-added Textile Technology, S Islam, Textile Excellence J., Anniversary Issue, Jul. 3(1) 55-56, 2005 



প্রকাশিত: Textile Excellence J., Anniversary Issue, Jul. 3(1) 55-56, 2005 

সৌজন্যেTexTek Solutions ::  Vision Creates Value
শফিউল ইসলাম
ইমেইল:   shafiul_i@yahoo.com :: ওয়েবঃ textek.weebly.com :: Canada :: www.linkedin.com/in/shafiul2009

Value-added Textile Technology

Monday, 25 April 2005

Specialty Textiles

Specialty Textiles

ITS 98th Scientific Session: 'Specialty Textiles', Ottawa, 21 April 2005

98th Scientific Session “Specialty Textiles” & 197th Board of Directors’ Meeting

The 98th Technical Session ‘Specialty Textiles’ of the Institute of Textile Science was held on 21 April 2005 at Industry Canada in Ottawa. This follows a highly successful October 2004 ITS 97th Scientific Session ‘Cutting Edge Technical Textiles’ held in Mississauga. Ms Sara Filbee and Nita Saville of Industry Canada welcomed distinguished speakers and delegates.

Dr Shafiul Islam, CText FTI, of TexTek Solutions, chaired the 98th Scientific Session. A record number of participants enjoyed insightful presentations:

Dr Wen Zhong, University of Manitoba, presented - ‘Protective Respirators for BioDefense’ – with focused R&D initiatives to combine critical structural design.

Mr. Eric Barry’s, Eric Barry Consulting, Oakville, presentation - ‘No Place to Hide!’ - revealed the textile industry’s challenges in the edge of rapid globalization and trade liberalization.

Dr Elizabeth Crown and Rohit Sati, University of Alberta presented ‘Materials for Protection from Steam and Condensate’ with promising research results.

Dr Jacek Mlynarek, CTT Group, Quebec, presented an overview of emerging opportunities and development trend in the field of value-added textiles.

Helena Vandeweerd, Erhardt Schumann, Jerry Bauerle and Darko Medved presented tokens of appreciation to the distinguished guest speakers.

Dawn Carrick presented the ITS Science Award to Dr. Elizabeth Crown for her remarkable contribution to textile research and innovations, and Peter Marsh presented the ITS Fellowship Award to Erhardt Schumann for his dedication in the textile field. Dr Shafiul Islam presented plaques to ITS Past Presidents: Dawn Carrick and Erhardt Schumann.

In the 197th Board of Directors’ Meeting in Ottawa on 21 April 2005, ITS Board of Directors elected the Executive Team for 2005-06: President - Dr. Shafiul Islam, Secretary - Helena Vandeweerd, Vice President - Darko Medved, Treasurer - Jerry Bauerle, Past President - Dawn Carrick; and Directors: Dr. Jacek Mlynarek, Peter Marsh, Tom Hong and Peter Aspley.


We plan to celebrate our 50th anniversary and100th Scientific Session in 2006 as well as revamp our new website www.textilescience.ca. This year, ITS BoD welcomed: Drs Lena Horne and Wen Zhong, University of Manitoba, Dr. Guowen Song, University of Alberta, and Ms. Catherine Andersson, QETE, DND, QC as new members.

The Institute of Textile Science will be holding its 99th Scientific Session: ‘Coated and Laminated Textiles’ on October 19th, 2005 in Kingston followed by the 198th ITS Board of Directors’ Meeting. We invite guest speakers. Hope to see you all on October 19th in Kingston.



Front L>R: Dr. Shafiul Islam, CText FTI, TexTek Solutions; Jerry Bauerle, BodyCote Ortech; Peter Marsh, PLM Consulting. Back L>R: Darko Medved, Ivodex Enterprises Inc; Dr. Jacek Mlynarek, CTT Group; Erhardt Schumann, DuPont Canada; Eric Barry, Eric Barry Consulting; Dawn Carrick, DND; Dr Wen Zhong, University of Manitoba;. Dr. Elizabeth Crown, University of Alberta; Helena Vandeweerd, Tulmar Safety Systems Inc.


Peter Marsh presents the ITS Fellowship Award to Erhardt Schumann


Dawn Carrick presents the ITS Science Award to Dr. Elizabeth Crown


Dr. Elizabeth Crown with her ITS Science Award.

By: Dr. Shafiul A. Islam, CText FTI
President, Institute of Textile Science
Chair, ITS 98th Scientific Session: ‘Specialty Textiles’


Download ITS 98th Scientific Session Program & Registration Form

Specialty Textiles: http://textilescience.ca/sessions_98th.html

সৌজন্যেTexTek Solutions ::  Vision Creates Value

শফিউল ইসলাম
ইমেইল:   shafiul_i@yahoo.com :: ওয়েবঃ textek.weebly.com :: Canada :: www.linkedin.com/in/shafiul2009

Tuesday, 15 March 2005

Microwave Irradiation Technique to Enhance Protein Fibre Properties

Microwave Irradiation Technique to Enhance Protein Fibre Properties

লিখেছেন Shafiul Islam   
Saturday, 13 November 2010
Dedicated to passionate scientist Dr Mashiur Rahman
Microwave Irradiation Technique to Enhance Protein Fiber Properties, M Tsukada, S Islam, T Arai, A. Boschi, G Freddi, Autex Research Journal 5(1), 40-48, 2005  



Courtesy of Autex Research Journal, Vol. 5, No. 1, March 2005




Added from Canada ~*~ 2010 November 13.
সৌজন্যেTexTek Solutions ::  Vision Creates Value

শফিউল ইসলাম
ইমেইল:   shafiul_i@yahoo.com :: ওয়েবঃ textek.weebly.com :: Canada :: www.linkedin.com/in/shafiul2009
মন্তব্যগুলো (16)Add Comment
...
লিখেছেন Abdullah Kafi, November 17, 2010
"Tensile properties were measured with an automatic tensile testing machine (Tensilon UTM-II, Toyo
Baldwin Co, Ltd.) under standard testing conditions. Each value is the average of 20 measurements.
The constant drawing rate of the sample is 10 min/min, the load at full scale is 500g, the sample
length is 10cm, the chart speed is 200 mm/min and the strain rate is 40 mm/min"

May I know the name of your standard?
MICROWAVE IRRADIATION TECHNIQUE TO ENHANCE PROTEIN FIBRE PROPERTIES
লিখেছেন Shafiul Islam, November 17, 2010
Kafi, Thank you for your interest and question. Please google for the name of the standard. More specifically you may find this inforamtion on ASTM's website. If you fail to find the information, I will dig deeper.... I have all ASTM standards on my old computer. That computer is in the box right now. Let me know if I can be of further assistance to you.
Thanks again,
Shafiul 
...
লিখেছেন Abdullah Kafi, November 17, 2010
Thanks Shafiul. I already got standard test method for tensile properties of yarns by single strand method, which is ASTM D2256/D2256M-10, however, I need to find a standard for multifilament tow having 1-1.3 denier/filament, any idea? 
MICROWAVE IRRADIATION TECHNIQUE TO ENHANCE PROTEIN FIBRE PROPERTIES
লিখেছেন Shafiul Islam, November 17, 2010
Hi Kafi, Great! Please search ASTM site. You can reach them by email too. What is the tow size? For high performance fiber you may need special grip to avoid any slippage during tensile testing. Further, do you know the theoretical break strength? This should be the basis of selecting the right load cell and grip.
...
লিখেছেন Abdullah Kafi, November 17, 2010
We have been trying to get some from a Turkish based company which should between 6K-24K, don't know the breaking strength util I get the specification in details.still waiting.. 
  
...
লিখেছেন Abdullah Kafi, November 17, 2010
Hi Shafiul, I hv been currently thinking to make a set up to heat treat the acrylic fibres under tension. It should be lab scale which is able to simulate actual process of fibre manufacturing. My idea is to use simply the batch process, however, it is better if I could find anyone selling the lab scale furnace allowing continuous process, alternatively we are interested to attach tensioner to our tube furnace and other end of the fibre with the instron load cell...not sure how it will be simple!! hope you could help!! 
Microwave Irradiation Technique to Enhance Protein Fibre Properties
লিখেছেন Shafiul Islam, November 18, 2010
Kafi, Excellent. For the twist-less tow, you may have to apply a little twist to get a clean break. This will be reflected in the stress-strain curve. ASTM also offers a guideline on the amount of twist to be applied based on the dtex/denier of the tow. 
Microwave Irradiation Technique to Enhance Protein Fibre Properties
লিখেছেন Shafiul Islam, November 18, 2010
Kafi, Thanks. During the spider silk innovation, we steam annealed and heat-set our spider silk fiber under the predetermined load, steam, temperature and time in the autoclave to produce super-fine fiber. You may find more information in our patent posted in the textile section. Hope you will find this idea helpful. 
...
লিখেছেন Abdullah Kafi, November 18, 2010
Methods and apparatus for spinning spider silk protein, S Islam et al., USP 7,057,023 Jun 6---is it the right one?
...
লিখেছেন Shafiul Islam, November 18, 2010
Kafi, Yes.... Thanks.
 
...
লিখেছেন Abdullah Kafi, November 21, 2010
Hi Shafiul, I went through USP 7,057,023 and found only the followings as closer to my interest:

"In still yet other embodiments, the bath is at a temperature of 50C. to 100° C. In preferred embodiments, the filament is drawn through steam. Other plasticizers include isethionic acid, pyrrolidone, piperidine, morpholine, and glycerol, another preferred plasticizer. Alternatively, small batches of biofilaments may be drawn by hand or annealed in an oven under a tension weight"

How can I know more details about your equipment settings, i.e. annealing (steam) and heat setting (under tension?

Sincerely,

Yours Kafi

...
লিখেছেন Shafiul Islam, November 21, 2010
Hello again Dr. Kafi, Thank you for your continual interest in my work. In the patent, we revealed a broader range and scope to cover a wide range of processing spectrum. Specific settings and process parameters are often considered proprietary information or trade secret. I recall our autoclave had the progressive time-dependent temperature and steam control options.

Each fiber has a unique physical properties. Your baseline guideline should be thermal and tensile data of the fiber, knowing your baseline and improving your baseline gradually. Apply load as a percentage of breaking force of the fiber and optimize all settings and processing parameters through the experimental work. Hoping these hints are helpful.
...
লিখেছেন Abdullah Kafi, December 11, 2010
Thanks Shafiul for your valuable feedback. Now I have the following questions in my mind:


1. "Apply load as a percentage of breaking force of the fiber"--what percent?

2. how to maintain constant load while heat treating fibre? Please note my fibre face continuous shrinkage or elongation during the heat treatment.

3. How to treat fibres under constant length?

4. What set up did you use to treat fibre under both constant force and length?

5. Would you please provide 1/2 relevant papers/technical notes for 2/3/4?

Thanks,

Yours Kafi 
Qs & As
লিখেছেন Shafiul Islam, December 11, 2010
Kafi, Thanks for your Qs. Here are prospective As to your Qs:

1: Trial and error! Keep the end result in mind. Applied load should reflect the anticipated outcome. An example: if you choose the 10% of the breaking strength and not getting the result U want, U have a choice. Either increase or decrease the load to optimize your critical structure-property-performance interrelationships.

2. Modern tensile testers offer all choices including environmental chamber to choose your most experimental options. Usual choices: a)constant rate of elongation (CRE) and b)constant rate of load (CRL). Further, you can stop the tensile tester at a predetermined length or load.

3. Keep your length fixed.

4&5. Please consult articles and patents. It should be a fiber specific custom solution.

Hoping you would find these hints/tips helpful. Good luck!
 
...
লিখেছেন Abdullah Kafi, December 14, 2010
Hi Shafiul,

Referring to your answer 3 again----

It was difficult to maintain a constant length during heat treatment as the fibre always shrink. I didn't try it yet using our tensile tester, however, change in fibre length was obvious while experiment was conducted at fixed length simply using the tube furnace. Not sure tensile machine could solve this problem.

Referring to your answer 4&5----

I did some search and havn't got the right patent/article yet I exactly want. May I know what do you mean by "fiber specific custom solution"?

Thanks for your coopeartion.

Regards,

Kafi
 
...
লিখেছেন Shafiul Islam, December 17, 2010
Hi Kafi,
1. Holding force should be considerably greater than the breaking force. Use effective grip, avoid slippage resist shrinkage or allow controlled shrinkage during heat-setting.

2. Each fiber has a unique visco-elastic property. Your load level should reflect the stress-strain curve. Do you need to select the load level beyond the initial modulus? Unlikely.
Thanks. 
Courtesy of biggani.org

Microwave Irradiation Technique to Enhance Protein Fibre Properties: http://biggani.com/content/view/1461/158/