The Manila Times

Natural textiles see strong demand

- CONRAD M. CARIÑO

THE Philippine­s has been pursuing the developmen­t of natural textiles to meet strong consumer demand at home and abroad.

Celia Elumba, former director of the Department of Science and Technology-Philippine Textile Research Institute (Dost-PTRI), said natural textiles have revealed competitiv­e advantages.

“You know, the Philippine­s is not trade positive in many things but in vegetable fibers, we are trade positive. And this has been shown through time over the decades and more countries have expressed an interest…,” she said during the recent Asean Access Week. Asean is the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

Elumba said major brands are paying attention to concerted consumer activity on and demand for the use of natural textile materials.

She added natural textiles also have a captive and underserve­d market in the country.

Elumba cited a law in the Philippine­s prescribin­g the use of tropical fabrics for uniforms of public officials and employees.

Tropical fibers include those of abaca, banana, and pineapple leaf and silk, she said.

“[There is] potential for 21 million meters of PTF (Philippine tropical fiber) to serve 1.8 million government employees,” she added.

Elumba said there is thus a strong demand for eco-friendly textiles both here and overseas.

“We have a robust community of designers and social enterprise­s. Materials developed by PTRI are used by social enterprise­s, designers — a combinatio­n of cotton with pineapple leaf, cotton with abaca, and cotton with sugar bagasse,” she said.

Elumba said higher natural textile fiber is a “vote for planet Earth.”

“Finally, why natural textiles? This is an alternativ­e to micro plastics; it is a micro fiber solution that generates 9.5 million metric tons per year,” she added.

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