Contact Info

Some Popular Post

India–Nepal Ink Deal To Boost Rail Trade Connectivity

India–Nepal Ink Deal as a bilateral meeting between Piyush Goyal,

Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal Visits Moscow For The 26th Meeting Of The India-Russia Working Group On Trade And Economic CooperationTrade

Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal met Vladimir Ilyichev, Deputy Minister of

22nd Garknit-X: Showcasing Excellence in Textile Tech and Innovation

The 22nd Garknit-X, which started from 14 November 2025, marked

Cabinet Approves Mission To Boost Exports With ₹25,060 Cr Allocation

The Union Cabinet chaired by the Prime Minister, Narendra Modi

  • Home  
  • CITI Also For Disposing Of Procured Cotton
- Apparel and Textile News - Apparel Brands and Companies

CITI Also For Disposing Of Procured Cotton

Textiles trade body, Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI) has urged the union textiles minister, Santosh Kumar Gangwar to direct Cotton Corporation of India (CCI) to dispose of the procured cotton immediately to avoid an artificial shortage of cotton in the market and bring cotton prices to reasonable levels. CITI chairman, Prem Malik shot off […]

CITI Textiles trade body, Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI) has urged the union textiles minister, Santosh Kumar Gangwar to direct Cotton Corporation of India (CCI) to dispose of the procured cotton immediately to avoid an artificial shortage of cotton in the market and bring cotton prices to reasonable levels.

CITI chairman, Prem Malik shot off a letter to Gangwar as the market arrivals maintained to dwindle position while the CCI continued to sit on over 83 lakh bales of cotton. The lower arrivals and the CCIs’ reluctance to offload the cotton has led to a shortage of the item in several production centres in spite of the fairly large production of 390 lakh bales during the current cotton season.

Malik said that most of the cotton of the current season has already arrived in the market and therefore increase in cotton prices at this stage would only help traders and not farmers. He also pointed out that with a huge quantity remaining with CCI, traders are also finding an opportunity to hoard cotton and push up prices further. The only way to force traders to bring out cotton to the market is by disposing of CCI’s cotton stock through e-auctions and at reasonable prices.

Southern India Mills Association (SIMA) made a similar appeal to Gangwar last week. SIMA also wanted Gangwar to direct the CCI to immediately start selling cotton by e-auction directly to the actual users with liberal credit norms.

Reference Link

Address

© 2025. Freeman Apparel & Lifestyle. All rights reserved.