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India opens first PM MITRA park in Warangal

May 19, 2026
India opens first PM MITRA park in Warangal

By AI, Created 11:55 AM UTC, May 19, 2026, /AGP/ – India’s first operational PM MITRA textile park has opened in Warangal, Telangana, as the country seeks to draw global fashion brands looking for faster sourcing, integrated manufacturing and lower-emission production. The project is expected to expand textile capacity, create more than 24,000 direct jobs and strengthen India’s bid to become a larger apparel hub.

Why it matters: - India is using the PM MITRA park model to offer global fashion brands a more integrated textile supply chain. - The Warangal project adds sustainability, export readiness and industrial scale to India’s pitch as a sourcing alternative beyond traditional manufacturing hubs. - The park’s Zero Liquid Discharge system is designed to address water and wastewater concerns that matter to international buyers and compliance teams.

What happened: - India’s first operational PM MITRA Park opened in Warangal, Telangana, also known as the Kakatiya Mega Textile Park. - The park is part of the Government of India’s PM MITRA scheme under the Ministry of Textiles. - The scheme calls for seven integrated textile parks across Telangana, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh. - The Warangal site spans nearly 1,327 acres. - The project carries an estimated investment of ₹1,695 crore. - The park is expected to attract more than ₹6,000 crore in additional investment. - Industry estimates put potential direct employment at more than 24,000 jobs.

The details: - The PM MITRA park model is designed to combine spinning, weaving, dyeing, processing, garment manufacturing, warehousing and exports inside one industrial zone. - The goal is to improve supply chain efficiency and reduce logistics costs. - The Warangal park includes Zero Liquid Discharge infrastructure, which treats, recycles and reuses industrial wastewater instead of releasing it. - Textile dyeing and processing operations face growing scrutiny over water use and pollution. - The park benefits from railway and highway connectivity that improves access to ports and export infrastructure. - Government programs such as PM MITRA and Production Linked Incentive schemes are encouraging investment in advanced textile infrastructure, compliance systems and sustainable production technologies. - India’s textile ecosystem includes strong clusters in Tiruppur, Surat, Ludhiana, Bengaluru, Jaipur, Noida and Delhi NCR. - Those clusters support knitwear, denim, sportswear, kidswear, technical textiles and fashion apparel. - India’s textile manufacturers are increasingly using automation, AI-based quality inspection, ERP systems, digital sampling and sustainable fabric innovation to cut lead times. - India’s low MOQ garment manufacturing capabilities are attracting fashion startups, D2C brands and independent labels from Europe, the U.S., Australia and the Middle East.

Between the lines: - The opening reflects how sourcing decisions are shifting as brands deal with rising production costs, geopolitical uncertainty and supply chain disruption. - India’s pitch is not just lower cost. The country is also selling scale, compliance and sustainability in one package. - For global fashion brands, integrated parks reduce the friction that comes from moving fabric, processing and garmenting across separate sites. - The mention of sustainability is especially important because environmental standards are tightening across Europe, the UK and North America. - NoName Global is positioning itself to serve that demand with scalable apparel manufacturing, private label production, low MOQ manufacturing and export-focused supply chain support.

What’s next: - The seven PM MITRA parks are intended to expand India’s textile manufacturing footprint over time. - Additional investment, job creation and export activity will depend on how quickly the remaining parks move from planning to operation. - The Warangal park will be watched as a test case for whether integrated, sustainability-focused textile zones can accelerate India’s role in global apparel sourcing.

The bottom line: - Warangal gives India its first live example of a large-scale textile park built to attract global brands that want speed, compliance and cleaner manufacturing.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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