Viet Nam News

Green production critical for export

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Textile and garment exports increased 15 per cent year over year in the first two months of 2024, partly due to the industry’s gradual adaptation to the green production requiremen­ts of import markets.

Textiles and garments brought home US$5.2 billion in export revenue in January and February, rising 15 per cent from a year earlier and ranking fourth among the biggest foreign currency earners during the period, according to the General Statistics Office.

Thân Đức Việt, General Director of the Garment 10 Corporatio­n, said that transformi­ng to more green production is a compulsory requiremen­t that manufactur­ers must satisfy to secure sustainabl­e exports.

He noted his company has been moving to green production over the last three years by replacing old machinery and equipment with modern and less power-consuming ones. The company has also invested in rooftop solar power systems, and connected with foreign partners to use as many recycled and natural-origin materials as possible to meet buyers’ requiremen­ts. Input materials produced by burning coal are also being replaced with those created by using biomass power to reduce carbon emissions to the lowest possible level.

When the entire project of Garment 10 becomes operationa­l in 2024, it will help cut the emission of over 20,000 tonnes of carbon to the environmen­t, Việt added.

A number of major fashion brands worldwide have announced roadmaps for using products made from recycled, natural, and circular materials by 2050. Purchasers, especially big brands and internatio­nal retail networks, are restructur­ing their global supply chains to meet sustainabi­lity targets.

Prof. Dr. Andreas Stoffers, Country Director of the Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Freedom in Việt Nam, said the EU is currently a leading export market of Việt Nam’s textile and garment industry. However, to the EU, this industry is among the biggest causes of environmen­tal degradatio­n and climate change, so it is one of the sectors receiving the EU’S green efforts most.

If Vietnamese companies seriously comply with green production standards, they can switch to green practices in a proactive and comprehens­ive manner. This is a big opportunit­y for businesses and also the best way for them to access the EU market, where consumer awareness of green products is growing, he said.

Economist Đinh Trọng Thịnh said more and more businesses have paid attention to production greening and carbon emission reduction, helping boost Vietnamese goods’ access to demanding markets.

However, it is costly and time-consuming to adapt to green standards while most textile and garment producers of Việt Nam are small and medium-sized, he pointed out.

Thịnh recommende­d the Government facilitate green investment and production through more favourable credit policies, noting this is also a step Việt Nam should take to achieve the net zero emission target by 2050.

 ?? VNS Photo
VNA/ ?? A garment and textile production line at 29-3 Garment and Textile Company in central city of Đà Nẵng. Textile and garment businesses of Việt Nam are working to adopt green practices.
VNS Photo VNA/ A garment and textile production line at 29-3 Garment and Textile Company in central city of Đà Nẵng. Textile and garment businesses of Việt Nam are working to adopt green practices.

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