By
Fibre2Fashion
Published
Apr 20, 2016
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Turkish exporters worried over duty on US cotton

By
Fibre2Fashion
Published
Apr 20, 2016

Turkey's decision to impose anti-dumping duties on American cotton imports will drive up costs for its own textile producers, hurting the competitiveness of their exports, the head of an industry group said on Tuesday, according to a Reuters report.



On Sunday, Ankara announced 3 per cent duty on US cotton imports, claiming that imports were hurting domestic cotton production. US cotton farmers have said they will fight the decision through the World Trade Organization and Turkish courts.

The spat is likely to strain on trade relations between one of the world's top fibre growers and one of its biggest customers at a time of weak global prices and demand.

"This is a decision that will increase raw material costs of textile producers by 2-3 per cent and will somewhat affect price competitiveness of Turkish exports," Ismail Gulle, head of the Istanbul Textile and Raw Materials Exporters Union, whose members account for 70 per cent of Turkish textile exports.

"US cotton has specialty uses, it is not something we could give up using, the industry will shoulder the costs."

Turkey is the second-biggest buyer of American cotton, with shipments ranging from 1.5 million to 2 million bales per year.

Turkey exported $17 billion worth of garments and ready-to-wear clothing last year, and $8 billion of textiles and raw materials, according to industry data.

The move had been widely expected since February, when Turkey's economy ministry said US cotton was hurting the domestic cotton industry.

"It was determined that the material damage to local production branch has been the result of dumping in imports," the government said in its official gazette on Sunday while announcing the move.

Copyright © 2024 Fibre2Fashion. All rights reserved.