The country’s textile makers on Thursday expressed fears that the sector might face a crisis of raw materials, mainly cotton, in February and March as shipping lines were unwilling to carry containers headed to Bangladesh due to a shortage of feeder’s vessels to unload the goods timely.
Bangladesh Textile Mills Association leaders at a press briefing at the office of the trade body in the capital, Dhaka, said that though the letter of
credits had already been opened for importing cotton needed for February-March but importers would not get the consignments on time due to the reluctance of shipping lines to enter the Bangladeshi channel.
Textile millers said that if they failed to get cotton on time, production in many of the spinning mills would stop and prices of yarns would increase on the local market.
Along with a shortage of feeder’s vessels, the inefficiency of the port has also been discouraging shipping lines to carry Bangladesh-bound cargoes as loading and unloading take more time causing additional anchoring charges for the mother vessels, BTMA president Mohammad Ali Khokon said.
He hinted that Bangladesh apparel and textile sector might face an acute shortage of raw materials to meet the global orders for the summer, which would be placed in February and March as import of cotton was taking place for 5-6 months after opening LCs as shipping lines unloaded Bangladeshi containers in ports of China and elsewhere.
Khokon said that Bangladesh has to pay an additional 4 to 5 cents for a pound of cotton due to the higher freight cost as container clearance in the country takes more than one week due to the complex customs procedures while other countries take a maximum of four to five days.
The BTMA president said that more than 100 members of the trade body informed him verbally that shipping lines were unwilling to enter the Bangladeshi channel due to the shortage of feeder vessels and containers and congestion in port.
Due to the trade war between the US and China, many of the containers remained stacked in the ports of the two countries, he said.
Khokon also demanded duty-free import of all types of fibers to ensure product diversification as different types of fibers with cotton are being used in the primary textile sector to produce yarns as per the demand of global buyers.
“’ Ease of doing business and ‘cost of doing business’ situation is still impediments for the country’s textile and apparel sector. The government should take initiative to remove the complexities in the tax system and shortage of feeder’s vessels to grow the business,’ he said.
Khokon demanded policy support from the government for a strong backward linkage industry saying that the future success of the forwarding linkage industry depended on the backward linkage industry.
BTMA senior vice-president Md Fazlul Hoque and director Md Saleudh Zaman Khan, among others, were present in the briefing.