India’s textile and apparel sector has set the global benchmark for sustainability at scale, and two clusters are leading the way. Tirupur and Panipat represent two of the most instructive examples of industrial sustainability anywhere in the world. What they have achieved in water recycling and material circularity is structural, verified, and at scale: precisely the kind of evidence that global buyers are now prioritising when making long-term sourcing decisions.
Tirupur: What Zero Liquid Discharge Actually Means at Scale
Tirupur offers what may be the most compelling proof point in global textile sustainability. Over 700 dyeing units now operate under Zero Liquid Discharge systems, channelling effluent through 20 Common Effluent Treatment Plants that collectively treat and recycle 130 million litres of wastewater every day. The cluster recovers 92-95% of all industrial effluent: a figure that would be remarkable for any single facility, let alone an entire export hub.
What makes this story particularly instructive is the economics. Recycled water costs less than fresh water supply, and salt recovery from the treatment process adds further savings. Sustainability here is not a compliance exercise, but a commercial preference. Tirupur accounts for over 54% of India’s total knitwear exports, which means a cluster of genuine global scale has made near-total water recycling its default operating model, not because it was the right thing to do, but because it made financial sense to do it.
Scale, circularity, and commercial logic together are reshaping how the global sourcing community thinks about India.
Panipat: The Circularity That Predates the Conversation
Panipat processes over one lakh tonnes of discarded textile waste every year, post-consumer garments from the US, UK, Canada, Europe, Japan, and Korea, converting them into yarn, blankets, floor coverings, and industrial products. Approximately 250 tonnes flows in every day. The cluster’s annual turnover stands at approximately USD 5.3 billion, with USD 1.3 billion from exports, and it employs around 1 million workers directly and indirectly.
Panipat cluster has moved well beyond traditional recycling. Chemical recycling units produce hybrid yarns that meet European quality standards, while high-speed shuttle-less looms weave them to specification.
The International and Domestic Framework
India’s circular transition has significant multilateral backing. The InTex India programme: a four-year UNEP-Ministry of Textiles collaboration (2023-2027), is embedding life cycle assessment tools and Product Environmental Footprint methodology directly into SME clusters in Surat, Karur, Salem, Dindigul, and Perundurai.
The European Union has matched this multilateral commitment with direct investment. At Bharat Tex 2025, the EU and India’s Ministry of Textiles jointly launched seven projects with a EUR 9.5 million grant, spanning nine states, targeting 35,000 direct beneficiaries, and aimed at embedding resource efficiency, traceability, and circular economy practices across the textile value chain.
In addition, the EU’s SWITCH-Asia programme is running an active intervention in Panipat and adjoining clusters, building a cluster-wide traceability mechanism and sustainable cluster brand for its recycling MSMEs, with green finance mobilisation underway as recently as April 2026. The signal is consistent: India’s textile clusters are not just being observed by the international community. They are being invested in.
UNEP is also building a National Textile Life Cycle Inventory Database for India, foundational infrastructure for EPR, Ecomark, and DPP-readiness compliance. Also, the UNIDO-GEF Textiles Project is running pilot interventions in Tirupur and across seven other clusters, designed as a scalable model for the sector.
Complementing this, GIZ India, under the EU-India Resource Efficiency and Circular Economy Initiative, released a dedicated Textile Toolkit at Bharat Tex 2025, providing Indian manufacturers with a practical framework for measuring and improving circularity across their operations.
On the domestic side, the Union Budget 2026-27 introduced the Tex-Eco Initiative as part of an Integrated Programme for the Textile Sector, providing MSMEs a fiscal framework for circular manufacturing, digital traceability, and green factory ratings aligned with global retailer requirements. The Tex-RAMPS scheme (approved in November 2025) strengthens research and innovation systems, while the TEEM Scheme provides capital support for cluster modernisation including ZLD (Zero Liquid Discharge) infrastructure.
What Bharat Tex 2026 offers
Bharat Tex 2026 is where this momentum finds its stage. Sustainability Pavilions will feature verified outcomes from clusters like Tirupur and Panipat, not projected targets. Dedicated sessions on Digital Product Passports and traceability will address the most pressing compliance question exporters face: how do you prove what you claim?
India’s textile recycling market is projected to reach USD 3.5 billion by 2030, generating nearly one lakh green jobs. The innovators and manufacturers building that market will be on the floor. India’s competitive advantage in the next decade will not be cost alone. It will be credibility.














