“Weave the Future”: Textile Ministry sets up taskforce to promote sustainable fashion

Marking National Handloom Day, the Ministry of Textiles unveiled a sustainability-driven exhibition and an ESG taskforce aimed at advancing circularity in fashion. The Weave the Future showcase highlights regenerative handloom traditions, indigenous cotton, and artisan-led innovations shaping the future of textiles.

Knitted fabric textile

Marking National Handloom Day, the Crafts Museum in New Delhi came alive with vibrant colours, intricate textures, and stories of resilience at Weave the Future – Regenerative Edition. This year’s exhibition, inaugurated by Pabitra Margherita, Minister of State for Textiles, celebrates handlooms not just as cultural heritage, but as powerful tools for sustainability, circularity, and climate-conscious innovation.

The second edition of the event shifts the focus from last year’s theme of upcycling to championing traditional, regenerative alternatives. It honours the wisdom embedded in India’s textile heritage — knowledge rooted in land, seasons, and communities. Bringing together 30 participating brands and initiatives, the exhibition highlights a new wave of textile artisans, weavers, designers, and enablers committed to redefining the future of fashion.

From installations on climate-conscious weaving to demonstrations of digital tools for artisan marketing, Weave the Future is a meeting ground for heritage and innovation. The displayed works range from heritage weaves like khadi, chanderi, and paithani, to contemporary interpretations that blend old-world craftsmanship with new-age sustainability.

In India, the handloom sector employs over 35 lakh people, more than 70% of whom are women. Beyond its economic contribution, the sector plays a critical role in women’s empowerment, sustainable livelihoods, and eco-friendly production processes. By avoiding the heavy industrial machinery and resource-intensive processes of mass textile manufacturing, handlooms naturally align with low-carbon, minimal-waste principles.

Government’s ESG Push in Textiles

Speaking in the Rajya Sabha, Minister Pabitra Margherita noted that the Ministry of Textiles has constituted an Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) taskforce — a multi-stakeholder platform aimed at identifying “hotspots” in the textile value chain. Its mandate includes engaging with relevant stakeholders to introduce interventions that can minimise negative environmental and social impacts.

Given the significant environmental footprint of the global textile industry — from water pollution caused by dyeing to excessive energy consumption and post-consumer waste — India’s push for an ESG framework signals a proactive approach. This aligns with the global trend where sustainability metrics are becoming a decisive factor for international buyers and fashion houses.

Handlooms and other regenerative textile practices offer an inherent advantage in the sustainability debate. They typically rely on locally sourced natural fibres, use less water, and avoid synthetic dyes laden with harmful chemicals. Many artisan-led enterprises also adopt circular economy principles — where textile waste is repurposed or reintegrated into new creations, reducing landfill burden.

By embracing both tradition and innovation, regenerative textiles not only cater to conscious consumers but also strengthen India’s soft power in global trade, offering a unique value proposition rooted in culture and sustainability.

Pathways to reduce the environmental impact of India’s textile manufacturing

While handlooms represent a low-impact, heritage-driven model, much of India’s textile manufacturing still operates within resource-intensive industrial frameworks. To minimise environmental harm and position itself as a global leader in sustainable textiles, India could focus on the following areas:

1. Transition to Eco-Friendly Dyes and Processes
Chemical-heavy dyeing is one of the largest polluters in textile production. Expanding the use of natural dyes, low-impact chemical dyes, and waterless dyeing technologies can drastically cut water contamination and reduce toxicity in production hubs.

2. Energy-Efficient Manufacturing Units
Encouraging factories to adopt renewable energy sources, install energy-efficient machinery, and utilise heat recovery systems can lower the sector’s carbon footprint. Policy incentives such as tax breaks or subsidies for green retrofits could accelerate adoption.

3. Waste Reduction and Circular Economy Practices
Implementing robust systems for recycling post-industrial waste (scraps, defective pieces) and post-consumer textile waste can help close the loop. India could also explore industrial symbiosis, where waste from one process becomes raw material for another.

4. Water Conservation Technologies
Given that textile manufacturing is a major consumer of fresh water, promoting zero-liquid discharge systems, water recycling, and rainwater harvesting in manufacturing clusters could significantly ease pressure on local water resources.

5. Digital Supply Chain Tracking
Adopting digital tools like blockchain-based traceability systems can ensure supply chain transparency, making it easier to monitor sustainability claims, track environmental performance, and build trust with eco-conscious buyers.

6. Skill Development for Green Jobs
Training workers and artisans in sustainable techniques — from organic fibre processing to energy-efficient production methods — can ensure a just transition, where livelihoods are preserved while practices evolve.

7. Scaling Regenerative and Handloom Practices
While handlooms cater to niche markets, their principles can inspire scalable, semi-mechanised systems that retain low-impact benefits while meeting larger market demands. Public–private partnerships could help in modernising without industrialising entirely.

The Weave the Future – Regenerative Edition is more than an exhibition — it is a vision board for what India’s textile industry can become. By combining centuries-old artisanal wisdom with cutting-edge sustainability interventions, India can position itself as the global leader in regenerative fashion.

As consumer awareness grows and sustainability becomes a commercial necessity rather than a niche choice, initiatives like this not only celebrate heritage but also chart a viable path towards an environmentally responsible textile economy — one that is as rich in culture as it is in climate consciousness.

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