Pakistan to import 0.3mln cotton bales from US
LAHORE: Pakistan, a cotton-producing country, has committed to import more than 0.3 million bales from US during the current 2014/15 fiscal year. “We believe there is potential for even greater sales of US cotton to this growing market,” said Dahlen K Hancock, president of Cotton Council International
By our correspondents
May 21, 2015
LAHORE: Pakistan, a cotton-producing country, has committed to import more than 0.3 million bales from US during the current 2014/15 fiscal year.
“We believe there is potential for even greater sales of US cotton to this growing market,” said Dahlen K Hancock, president of Cotton Council International (CCI).
Hancock was talking to key textile executives from 11 Pakistani companies who visited US early this month to observe cotton production, processing and marketing and to meet with US cotton exporters.
CCI, which is the US’s export promotions arm, conducted the trade mission.
The delegation visited New York. It observed cotton research work in North Carolina and visited the US Department of Agriculture and a farm in California’s San Joaquin Valley. The group also met with the exporters in the cotton belt’s four major regions.
Pakistan ranks the eighth largest US cotton importer with import commitments of 335,000 bales in the current fiscal year. The country imported 169,000 bales of cotton from US in the previous fiscal year.
“This event empowered CCI to provide some high-level Pakistani textile manufacturing executives a better understanding of US raw cotton’s merits, including fiber’s superior quality and industry’s outstanding reputation for timely delivery,” said Hancock, who’s cotton producer based in Texas.
This trade mission’s companies are expected to collectively consume around 1.8 million bales of cotton 2014/15; of which 184,000 bales, or 10 percent, will be US cotton.
Pakistan imports high quality cotton from US and other countries to meet requirements of its textile industry.
Local demand outstrips production and the demand-supply gap has to be filled through imports.
An economic survey said the national cotton production stood at 12.8 million bales during the 2013-14 period against the target of 14.1 million bales, showing a decline of 9.2 percent against the target and fall of two percent over the last year’s production of 13 million bales.
The cotton production decreased due to fall in acreage, which is due to low cotton rates nationally and internationally during the last couple of years that discouraged the growers.
Cotton output is estimated to be around 14.94 million bales this year. An estimate said the country is expected to import around two million bales during 2015-16.
Cotton, having a share of 1.4 percent in national GDP and 6.7 percent in agriculture value addition, is an important source of raw material to the textile industry of the country.
“We believe there is potential for even greater sales of US cotton to this growing market,” said Dahlen K Hancock, president of Cotton Council International (CCI).
Hancock was talking to key textile executives from 11 Pakistani companies who visited US early this month to observe cotton production, processing and marketing and to meet with US cotton exporters.
CCI, which is the US’s export promotions arm, conducted the trade mission.
The delegation visited New York. It observed cotton research work in North Carolina and visited the US Department of Agriculture and a farm in California’s San Joaquin Valley. The group also met with the exporters in the cotton belt’s four major regions.
Pakistan ranks the eighth largest US cotton importer with import commitments of 335,000 bales in the current fiscal year. The country imported 169,000 bales of cotton from US in the previous fiscal year.
“This event empowered CCI to provide some high-level Pakistani textile manufacturing executives a better understanding of US raw cotton’s merits, including fiber’s superior quality and industry’s outstanding reputation for timely delivery,” said Hancock, who’s cotton producer based in Texas.
This trade mission’s companies are expected to collectively consume around 1.8 million bales of cotton 2014/15; of which 184,000 bales, or 10 percent, will be US cotton.
Pakistan imports high quality cotton from US and other countries to meet requirements of its textile industry.
Local demand outstrips production and the demand-supply gap has to be filled through imports.
An economic survey said the national cotton production stood at 12.8 million bales during the 2013-14 period against the target of 14.1 million bales, showing a decline of 9.2 percent against the target and fall of two percent over the last year’s production of 13 million bales.
The cotton production decreased due to fall in acreage, which is due to low cotton rates nationally and internationally during the last couple of years that discouraged the growers.
Cotton output is estimated to be around 14.94 million bales this year. An estimate said the country is expected to import around two million bales during 2015-16.
Cotton, having a share of 1.4 percent in national GDP and 6.7 percent in agriculture value addition, is an important source of raw material to the textile industry of the country.
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