Critical Decisions This Week On Textile Trade Issues

With trade officials scheduled to
make critical decisions this week on a framework for the Doha Round of trade liberalization
negotiations, US textile industry lobbyists are stepping up their pressure for special sectoral
negotiations for textiles and apparel. Sectoral negotiations would reduce the possibility that
textile trade concessions would be made in exchange for concessions in other areas. In addition,
the US industry also would hope to get a safeguard mechanism that would prevent countries such as
China and Vietnam from disrupting the US market.

Some 40 trade ministers, including US Trade Representative Susan Schwab, are meeting in
Geneva this week in the hope of reaching agreement on the so-called “modalities” that would
determine the course of tariff cuts and other trade liberalization proposals being considered by
the 149 members of the World Trade Organization (WTO). While textile interests in the United States
and several other developed countries have been pressing the US government and their respective
governments to support textile sectorals, US importing interests oppose the sectorals, feeling they
would not be in the best interest of freeing up trade.

Agreement on modalities, already three months behind schedule, will have to be reached soon
if the WTO negotiations will have any chance of being completed by year’s end — a target that has
been set in view of the fact that President George W. Bush’s trade promotion authority (TPA)
expires next year. Most trade officials in this country feel it would be extremely difficult, if
not impossible, to get congressional approval of a trade agreement unless it is considered under
TPA procedures that require an agreement to be voted up or down without any amendments.

On the eve of the modalities negotiations, Cass Johnson, president of the Washington-based
National Council of Textile Organizations (NCTO), cited US trade with China as a prime
justification for a special textile sectoral. He said China has now overtaken half of the US import
market for apparel in product categories where quotas have been removed, and he pointed out the
worldwide share of the US import market has fallen off. In those product categories still under
quotas, imports have grown to only 8 percent of the US market.

“[Based on] the apparel categories that have been quota-free the longest — since 2002, the
results are grim,” Johnson said. “Every major supplier except India and Vietnam has lost large
amounts of the market share in the United States to China. Other developed countries’ figures are
similar. China’s share of the Japanese and Australian apparel markets is now over 75 percent. In
the European Union, in apparel categories where quotas have been removed since 2002, China’s share
is now 74 percent.

Noting the Doha Round talks are approaching a “critical juncture,” Johnson said: “A key
question is whether the WTO will adopt a sectoral or whether it will decide to hand world textile
and apparel markets over to China. By adopting a sectoral, the WTO will be sending a message that
it will defend textile and apparel jobs worldwide from China’s predatory pricing, currency
manipulation and vast government subsidies.”


June 27, 2006

Avery Dennison RIS Adds DNA To ComfortTag™

In an effort to support brand owners
that are using tag-free labeling instead of woven or printed labels, Westlake Village, Calif.-based
Avery Dennison Retail Information Services (RIS) has incorporated a security ink with a DNA marker
to its ComfortTag™ heat transfers. The covert technology may protect apparel, linens and footwear
from diversion and counterfeiting, and it complements overt security measures, according to the
company.

“Avery Dennison RIS works exclusively with the brand owners’ approved factories,” said
Sharon Dalton, product marketing manager. “We have systems in place to ensure that the factories
issuing purchase orders and purchasing ComfortTag are verified as being the factories specified by
our customers. Beyond that, we follow strict chain-of-custody requirements to ensure that each and
every label is safe and secure in our facility and during transport to customer locations.”

“Brand owners can now choose to identify their merchandise with the high definition and
brilliant imaging of ComfortTag heat transfers without sacrificing the covert security they enjoyed
with more conventional labels,” Dalton added.


June 27, 2006

AAFA Announces Material World New York Programs, Adds Africa Pavilion

The Arlington, Va.-based American
Apparel & Footwear Association (AAFA), organizer of Material World New York, has laid out its
educational program plans for the three-day exhibition for the sewn products industry. The event
will be held Tuesday through Thursday, Sept. 26-28, 2006, at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center,
New York City.

AAFA’s Supplier Resource Committee will kick off the educational programs Tuesday morning
with a headliner event titled

“Product Lifecycle Management
(PLM)

: Integrating People, Processes and
Information.” The program, subject to an admission fee of $50 in advance or $75 onsite, will offer
case studies from three industry brands and their PLM users; as well as open panel discussions of
business practices, technologies, and improvement and growth opportunities for businesses that
implement PLM.

A new event this year will be Tuesday afternoon’s Designer Conversations, featuring a panel
of New York-based designers discussing issues related to the current designer business. The free
program will be on a first-come, first-served basis.

AAFA also announced a pavilion presenting more than 30 textile and apparel companies from
Africa will be included among the numerous country and regional pavilions on the exhibit floor. The
Africa Pavilion — organized by Trade Links LLC, a Washington-based company that promotes African
products and services in the US market — will present a panel discussion on Tuesday afternoon
titled “Brand Africa Presents: What’s New — Sourcing Apparel in Africa,” moderated by Bill Releford
Jr., D.P.M., US president and CEO, Made in Africa Inc. — a Beverly Hills, Calif.-based manufacturer
and marketer of apparel made in its network of facilities in sub-Saharan Africa. That program also
is free of charge and on a first-come, first-served basis.

Material World New York will present programs on security and trade as well, in addition to
numerous color and style trends. A complete schedule of events is available at
www.material-world.com.


June 20, 2006

Congress Acting On Vietnam Legislation

A bipartisan group of senators and
members of the House of Representatives has introduced legislation that would grant permanent
normal trade Relations (PNTR) to Vietnam, an essential step toward Vietnam’s accession to the World
Trade Organization (WTO). The Senate bill was introduced by Sens. Gordon Smith, R-Ore., and Max
Baucus, D-Mont., with six initial co-sponsors, and a companion House bill was introduced by 22
members. The action followed the negotiation of a free trade agreement (FTA) between the United
States and Vietnam that, among other things, calls for the removal of textile and apparel import
quotas. US textile manufacturers are upset by the Vietnam FTA, but retailers and other importers of
textiles and apparel have given it a strong endorsement.

In introducing the bill, Smith said: “As a businessman, I’ve seen how trade can raise
standards of living both in America and the world. International commerce creates new growth
opportunities for manufacturers and agriculture producers, and the WTO membership for Vietnam will
ensure that everyone is playing by the same rules.”

In a related development, citing their concerns over the Doha Round of trade liberalization
negotiations and the Vietnam FTA, 44 members of the House of Representatives wrote US Trade
Representative Susan Schwab, calling for separate sectoral negotiations for textiles and what they
called “adequate safeguards” as a condition for admitting Vietnam to the WTO. The members of
Congress are from predominately textile-producing states. Their letter says the two requests are “
crucial to the long-term health and survival of the US textile industry.”


June 20, 2006

DyStar To Acquire Boehme Group

Frankfurt-based textile and leather
dye, auxiliary and services provider DyStar Textilfarben GmbH & Co. Deutschland KG has agreed
to acquire the business activities of the Germany-based Boehme Group — also a supplier of dyes and
auxiliaries for textiles and leather processing — for an undisclosed price. The transaction is
expected to be completed by mid-August of this year.

The acquisition includes Boehme’s 16 affiliates and 11 production sites, which employ more
than 700 people in Argentina, Australia, Austria, Brazil, Canada, China, Ecuador, Israel, Mexico,
South Africa, Thailand and the United States.

“Boehme broadens our extensive product offering for the textile industry and strengthens our
position in the leather business,” said Clemens Willée, Ph.D., CEO, DyStar. “Our combined expertise
will make us an even more reliable partner for our customers in the future.”

According to a statement by its shareholders, Boehme conducted an extended search “to find a
partner that fits well with our company. An important part of this process was to ensure minimal
product portfolio overlap to enable the maximum growth potential for our business. In this regard,
we are convinced that DyStar represents the optimal partner.”


June 20, 2006

Gildan To Acquire Kentucky Derby Hosiery

Montreal-based branded basic apparel
manufacturer Gildan Activewear Inc. has agreed to acquire Hopkinsville, Ky.-based Kentucky Derby
Hosiery Co. Inc. for approximately $45 million. The deal is expected to close on or around July 3,
2006.

With $130 million in annual sales, Kentucky Derby produces hosiery products primarily for
mass retailer private-label programs. Gildan plans to use the company’s experience and mass-market
distribution system to help build its own brand as well as to continue to provide products for
Kentucky Derby’s brand licenses and private-label programs.

Gildan also is expanding its Rio Nance manufacturing complex in Honduras, adding two new
facilities there including one for large-scale production of athletic socks. It also is in the
process of bringing a new textile facility online in the Dominican Republic.

Kentucky Derby majority owner and CEO William H. “Bill” Nichol Jr. will remain on board to
lead the hosiery business, working with Gildan’s sales and marketing team to improve Kentucky
Derby’s existing business, develop Gildans retail brand for basic apparel and promote Gildans
position in the US hosiery market. 

June 20, 2006

PGI To Expand Capacity In Argentina

Polymer Group Inc. (PGI), North
Charleston, S.C., has announced plans to more than double the production capacity of its
joint-venture facility, Dominion Nonwovens Sudamericana S.A. (DNS), in Buenos Aires, Argentina, to
better serve its customers for hygiene products in the Common Market of the South (Mercosur)
trading region.

Installation of the state-of-the-art wide-width, multibeam spunbond line — which will have
an annual production capacity of more than 15,000 tonnes — will begin during the second half of
2006, and the company expects to begin commercial production on the line in late 2007.

The new line will produce high-quality, fine-denier top sheet and other materials for diaper
applications. DNS also will combine the new line’s capacity with its coating capabilities to
produce value-added goods such as cloth-like backsheet.

“The developing regions of the world, like Argentina, hold significant potential for PGI as
we continue to execute on our strategy of growth by offering the right product in the right places
around the world,” said James L. Schaeffer, CEO, PGI. “Our joint venture in Argentina is recognized
as a world-class producer of engineered materials, and this line will enable us to continue to
provide the highest-quality products available in the markets to customers where they need them.”

DNS began operations in Buenos Aires in 1997, installing a multibeam spunmelt line to
provide hygiene and industrial products in Mercosur markets. In 2003, it added an extrusion line to
expand its production capabilities.


June 20, 2006

GretagMacbeth Launches Color I7 Spectrophotometer

GretagMacbeth — part of
Switzerland-based Amazys Holding AG and an enterprise color-management solutions provider with
offices in the Americas, Europe and Asia — now offers the Color i®7 fully automated
spectrophotometer with a unique embedded profiling function to enable accurate digital color
control in textile and apparel, furniture, automobile interiors and other applications.

According to the company, Color i7 ensures color consistency in product or product component
design, specification and manufacture; and its unique self-diagnostic function reduces production
errors and slowdowns, thus speeding up time-to-market. In addition, its open technology is
integrated easily with most digital workflow systems, GretagMacbeth reports.

“… [T]he more complex and global the supply chain becomes, the more difficult it can be to
control color,” said Jan-Paul van Maaren, vice president and general manager, Color and Appearance,
GretagMacbeth, noting the importance of color as an indicator of quality and driver of product
sales. “The Color i7 system helps companies to digitize color in their workflow so they can more
easily, reliably and cost-effectively manage their suppliers and factories the world over.”

Functions include a periodic prompt for the operator to verify performance, enabling quick
onsite correction of any color drift using the company’s NetProfiler® Internet-based software. The
instrument also creates a digital signature with each color measurement. It can be used in
conjunction with GretagMcbeth’s Color i®Match and Color i®QC software, and can be programmed to
adjust for job-specific variables.


June 20, 2006

Ciba Forms Joint Venture With Virchow

Switzerland-based Ciba Specialty
Chemicals Inc. has agreed to form a joint venture with Virchow Group, a Hyderabad, India-based
pharmaceutical company whose Virchow Drugs Pvt. Ltd. business manufactures Triclosan, an
antimicrobial originally developed by Ciba and used in products ranging from deoderants, soaps and
toothpaste to shower curtains and technical textiles.

Under the agreement, Virchow Drugs will use Ciba technology to upgrade its Triclosan
manufacturing operation, enabling it to produce the antimicrobial ingredient to meet United States
Pharmacopoeia quality specifications and international environmental standards. The joint venture
also will allow Ciba to improve its market position in Asia and expand its interest in Asian
cosmetic markets.

“This cooperation allows Ciba to further increase its position by expanding the offer of
quality antimicrobial products in the Asian region, where Ciba has a well-established presence,”
said Leonardo Harsch, global head of Ciba’s Detergent & Hygiene business. “The high quality
production facilities of Virchow and Ciba’s leading position in the Triclosan business fit together
very well.”


June 20, 2006

Australian Wool Companies Trust Form Training Center

Wool research and development company
Australian Wool Innovation Ltd.’s the International Fibre Centre — a textile processing and
manufacturing education and training company — and the Australian Wool Education Trust — a fund
provider for undergraduate and/or post-graduate training in wool and wool science and technology —
have founded the Australian Wool Textile Training Centre. The center, which will be housed within
the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation in Geelong, Victoria, will offer
courses designed for international wool industry professionals who want to increase their knowledge
and skills, especially in the use of Austrialian wool.

The center will offer its first series of courses from Sept. 18 to Oct. 3, 2006. The courses
will focus on all sectors of the wool textile industry — from growers, brokers, buyers and service
providers to processors, textile manufacturers, designers, retailers and merchandisers.
Participants may earn a certificate upon completion of one or more of the seven courses, which also
will feature industry tours and demonstrations.

The program also will offer the opportunity to learn more about the Australian wool
pipeline, including how that wool is purchased, manufactured into textile products and
marketed.


June 13, 2006

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