Some Popular Post

Rachel Amirtharaj Launches La Fantaisie Flagship Bridal Couture Atelier In Chennai

La Fantaisie, the luxury wedding couture house by celebrity fashion designer

Arvind Advanced Materials Enters US Textile Market With Dalco-GFT

Dalco-GFT, a U.S.-based manufacturer of specialized needle-punched non-woven specialty fabrics,

Textile Horizons 2026 Conference Announced By India ITME Society

India ITME Society has announced the launch of Textile Horizons

NICDC Projects Surge As DPIIT Strengthens Industry Partnerships

NICDC project review: Amardeep Singh Bhatia, Secretary, DPIIT, visited key

Indian Apparel - India's Trusted Apparel & Textile B2B Platform for News, Events & Manufacturers Directory

  • Home  
  • Yogi Plans To Revive Defunct Woollen Mills In UP
- Apparel and Textile News - Trade Info News

Yogi Plans To Revive Defunct Woollen Mills In UP

Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath at a meeting with officials of handicrafts and khadi department, directed them to revive state’s century old defunct woollen producing units in the state by infusing new technology. Revival packages should be drawn up for such units, he said. The Kanpur-based mill, run by the British India Corporation was […]

Yogi Plans To Revive Defunct Woollen Mills In UP
Quick Industry Summary
AI
Powered by Google Gemini — AI-generated, verify key facts before decisions.

Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath at a meeting with officials of handicrafts and khadi department, directed them to revive state’s century old defunct woollen producing units in the state by infusing new technology. Revival packages should be drawn up for such units, he said.

The Kanpur-based mill, run by the British India Corporation was founded in 1876 and was one of the most successful woollen mills in the British era. After flourishing for around 100 years, the mill gradually started accruing losses after Independence and liabilities piled up compared to revenue generated. It first went into the red in the early 80s and was finally declared sick and referred to the Board of Industrial and Financial Reconstruction (BIFR) in 1991.

Despite several attempts to revive the sick unit, the company finally has steadily cut production of its woollen products, one of which was worsted blankets. Once a textile hub, around 2001, Lal Imli was nominated for a revival package by BIFR. The revival package, however, came with many riders. It included a pay cut, and orders that no fresh recruitments would be allowed.

In 2013, the mill, then producing less than five per cent of what it used to in its hay days, was promised fresh finance for raw material from National Textile Corporation (NTC).

Apparel and Textile News, Apparel Talk, Indian Apparel