logo
India Ends Land Port Entry for Bangladeshi Garment Imports

India Ends Land Port Entry for Bangladeshi Garment Imports

Yahoo19-05-2025

India has imposed restrictions on Bangladesh's readymade garments (RMGs) from entering the country via its land ports, forcing the latter's exporters to rely on longer, more expensive shipping routes.
Bangladeshi cotton and cotton yarns, as well as items such as processed foods, plastic goods and wooden furniture, will no longer be allowed through six land ports in northeast India, under certain restrictions imposed by Directorate General of Foreign Trade Saturday.
More from Sourcing Journal
Ocean Carriers Levy Surcharges, Cut Pakistan Port Calls Amid India Trade Embargo
Maersk Expects No Cost Impact From Port Fees, Assures 'Unchanged' Service
Tariffs Tank China's US Exports, but Southeast Asia and India Cash In
Garments will be allowed to enter India only through the Nhava Sheva and Kolkata seaports, according to the notification.
According to the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA), in the first 10 months of the current fiscal year, RMG exports to India have already reached $563 million. A whopping 93 percent of cargo shipped goes through land ports.
'Land ports provide easy access for various goods. Shipping through seaports will take significantly more time,' BGMEA administrator Anwar Hossain told Bangladesh publication The Business Standard. 'We are currently consulting with exporters to understand the full impact. Once that's assessed, we'll approach the relevant authorities to seek solutions and explore alternative channels.'
Exporters rerouting goods through Kolkata would require the cargo to travel roughly 1,200 kilometers via road or rail to reach other northeastern cities closer to the Bangladesh-India border. While sending goods through land routes to India typically can take one-to-three days, the sea routes would take two weeks.
According to a report from another Bangladesh publication, The Daily Star, hundreds of trucks carrying India-bound goods were stuck at land ports or forced to leave without dropping off goods in the wake of the directive. At Benapole, the largest land port in Bangladesh, at least 36 trucks carrying ready-made garments were stranded on Sunday.
Bangladeshi Garment exporter Energypac Fashions Ltd reported three containers of formal suits and pants worth over $300,000 were stuck at Benapole.
India's government likely made the decision to help open more opportunities for the country's expanding domestic textile sector, and curb the indirect entry of Chinese fabrics routed through Bangladesh.
According to India's National Textile Committee, the policy could generate between 1,000 and 2,000 crore Indian rupees, or between $117 million and $234 million.
Indian textile stocks surged early Monday on the news, with Siyaram Silk Mills jumping more than 8 percent and Kitex Garments and Raymond Limited increasing 5 percent.
Under India's commerce ministry, the directorate implemented the trade policy shift in another escalation of tensions between the two countries since Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was ousted last summer. Hasina is currently residing in India under self-imposed exile, with the Bangladesh government seeking her extradition. India has yet to comply with the request.
The restrictions will not apply to Bangladeshi exports to Nepal and Bhutan transiting to India. Additionally, imports of fish, liquefied petroleum gas, edible oil and crushed stone from Bangladesh can still pass freely through Indian land ports.
The move to impose entry to RMGs and the other exports will hit 42 percent of India's total inbound trade from Bangladesh, affecting $770 million in product, according to a report from New Delhi-based Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI) released Sunday. Readymade garments are valued at $618 million, the report calculated.
India and Bangladesh have both imposed supply chain restrictions on each other in recent weeks amid the growing tensions.
In April, India revoked Bangladesh's access to transshipment services, which allowed the latter to export goods via India's land borders and customs stations. Bangladeshi exporters used the service to ship goods out of India's airports and seaports, with Indian exporters urging the government to end the service to the congestion that had built up.
Bangladesh had implemented some barriers of its own, halting foreign yarns from being imported into its own land ports in a move that pleased textile mills but frustrated apparel exporters in the country. Bangladesh orders roughly 45 percent of India's total cotton yarn exports.
The country also restricted rice imports from India through the same land routes last month, and placed bans on paper, tobacco, fish and powdered milk imports.
GTRI founder Ajay Srivastava said in the report that the cumulative actions, along with operational delays and tightened port inspections, have hampered Indian exporters and triggered calls for a 'calibrated response.'
'Top global brands like H&M, Zara, Primark, Uniqlo and Walmart source apparel from Bangladesh, some of which enters India's domestic market,' said Srivastava. 'Indian manufacturers have long expressed concern over the uneven playing field: they pay a 5 percent GST on locally sourced fabric, while Bangladeshi firms import fabric duty-free from China and receive export incentives for sales to India—giving them an estimated 10–15 percent price advantage.'
India implemented a 20 percent import tariff on nine varieties of knitted fabric in February to control flooding of cheap textiles apparel into country—namely from China.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump and China's Xi Jinping to speak soon, iron out trade fight, White House officials say
Trump and China's Xi Jinping to speak soon, iron out trade fight, White House officials say

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump and China's Xi Jinping to speak soon, iron out trade fight, White House officials say

President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping will speak soon to iron out trade issues including a dispute over critical minerals, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Sunday. Trump on Friday accused China of violating an agreement with the United States to mutually roll back tariffs and trade restrictions for critical minerals. "What China is doing is they are holding back products that are essential for the industrial supply chains of India, of Europe. And that is not what a reliable partner does," Bessent said in an interview with CBS' "Face the Nation." "I am confident that when President Trump and Party Chairman Xi have a call, that this will be ironed out. But the fact that they are withholding some of the products that they agreed to release during our agreement - maybe it's a glitch in the Chinese system, maybe it's intentional. We'll see after the President speaks with the party chairman." Trump said on Friday he was sure that he would speak to Xi. China said in April that the two leaders had not had a conversation recently. Asked if a talk with Xi was on Trump's schedule, Bessent said, "I believe we'll see something very soon." White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett said no specific date for the conversation has been set, but there have been discussions that the leaders will talk about last month's Geneva agreement on some tariff disputes. "President Trump, we expect, is going to have a wonderful conversation about the trade negotiations this week with President Xi. That's our expectation," Hassett said. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Trump and China's Xi Jinping to speak soon, iron out trade fight

Trump's tariffs are 'not going away' amid legal battles, White House says
Trump's tariffs are 'not going away' amid legal battles, White House says

Yahoo

time40 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump's tariffs are 'not going away' amid legal battles, White House says

WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump's tariffs are "not going away," Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said, downplaying a pair of recent court decisions that declared the bulk of the president's tariffs illegal and momentarily paused the levies. Lutnick's June 1 comments on Fox News Sunday came days after the Court of International Trade ruled that Trump lacked the authority under the emergency power he cited on April 2 to impose reciprocal tariffs on imports from most countries. An appeals court later said Trump can continue to levy the tariffs while challenging the ruling. Lutnick predicted Trump would win on appeal. But he also referenced other tariff authorities if the higher courts agree with the trade court that Trump can't invoke the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 to bypass Congress to issue the tariffs. Trade whiplash: Appeals Court allows Trump to keep tariffs while appeal plays out "Rest assured, tariffs are not going away," Lutnick said. "He has so many other authorities that even in the weird and unusual circumstance where this was taken away, we just bring on another or another or another." In addition to the trade court's ruling, a federal district judge in Washington, D.C. blocked the Trump administration from collecting tariffs from a pair of Illinois toy importers, also ruling that the same 1977 law didn't grant Trump the powers to impose tariffs as he claimed. Trump addressed the legal battles in a Sunday post on Truth Social: "If the Courts somehow rule against us on Tariffs, which is not expected, that would allow other Countries to hold our Nation hostage with their anti-American Tariffs that they would use against us. This would mean the Economic ruination of the United States of America!" Amid the tariff whiplash from the court rulings, Trump announced on May 30 that he's doubling his tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from a 25% rate to 50%. 'Nobody's going to get around that': Donald Trump to double tariffs on foreign steel to 50% "I think it cost us a week ‒ maybe cost us a week," Lutnick said of the court decisions, arguing that other countries still want to make trade deals with the United States. "Everybody came right back to the table. Everybody is talking to us. You're going to see over the next couple of weeks really first-class deals for the American worker." For two months, Trump and White House officials have boasted about their prospects of using tariffs to secure trade agreements with other nations. So far, the administration has only secured a deal with the United Kingdom, in addition to a pact with China to slash massive tariffs on each other for 90 days. Trump later accused China of violating the tariff agreement on May 30, White House officials: Trump and China's Xi Jinping to speak soon, iron out trade fight Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on CBS' "Face the Nation" that he expects Trump to soon talk with Chinese President Xi Jinping, expressing confidence trade issues will be "ironed out," including over critical minerals he said Beijing is refusing to open to trade. "They are withholding some of the products that they agreed to release during our agreement," Bessent said. "Maybe it's a glitch in the Chinese system. Maybe it's intentional. We'll see after the president speaks with the party chairman." The Chinese government said Xi has not spoken to Trump since his Jan. 20 inauguration. "I believe we'll see something very soon," Bessent said when asked whether a meeting is scheduled for Trump to talk to Xi. Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Trump tariffs are not going away amid legal battles: White House

BIS Issues Notice of Intent to Deny Applications for Licenses to
BIS Issues Notice of Intent to Deny Applications for Licenses to

Business Wire

time44 minutes ago

  • Business Wire

BIS Issues Notice of Intent to Deny Applications for Licenses to

HOUSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Enterprise Products Partners L.P. ('Enterprise') (NYSE: EPD) today announced that yesterday, June 3, 2025, Enterprise received notice from the U.S. Department of Commerce's Bureau of Industry and Security ('BIS') of BIS's intent to deny Emergency Authorization Requests ('EARs') with regard to three proposed cargoes of ethane to China, totaling approximately 2.2 million barrels. Per the Notice, Enterprise has up to twenty days to respond to BIS with any comments or rebuttals with regard to these affected EARs. Unless Enterprise is advised by the 45 th day after the date of the notification, these denials will become final without further notice. As previously disclosed on May 29, 2025 in a Current Report on Form 8-K filed by Enterprise with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, on the afternoon of Friday, May 23, 2025, BIS notified Enterprise of new licensing requirements for exports of 'ethane and butane, saturated, having a purity of 95 percent or more by volume' to China. This new licensing requirement was effective immediately (the licensing requirement for butane was subsequently withdrawn). According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration ('EIA'), total U.S. ethane production in 2024 was approximately 2.8 million barrels per day ('BPD') and total U.S. ethane exports were approximately 492,000 BPD. U.S. ethane exports to China were approximately 227,000 BPD in 2024, representing 8 percent of total U.S. ethane production and 46 percent of total U.S. ethane exports. Enterprise's marine export terminal on the Houston Ship Channel loaded approximately 213,000 BPD of ethane in 2024 of which approximately 40 percent, or 85,000 BPD, were destined to Chinese markets. Ethane exports destined to China from Enterprise's Morgan's Point facility in 2024 represented only 37 percent of total U.S. ethane exports to China for 2024. Currently, Enterprise estimates that total U.S. ethane exports to China has increased to approximately 290,000 BPD in 2025. Company Information and Use of Forward-Looking Statements Enterprise Products Partners L.P. is one of the largest publicly traded partnerships and a leading North American provider of midstream energy services to producers and consumers of natural gas, NGLs, crude oil, refined products and petrochemicals. Services include: natural gas gathering, treating, processing, transportation and storage; NGL transportation, fractionation, storage and marine terminals; crude oil gathering, transportation, storage and marine terminals; petrochemical and refined products transportation, storage and marine terminals; and a marine transportation business that operates on key U.S. inland and intracoastal waterway systems. The partnership's assets currently include more than 50,000 miles of pipelines; over 300 million barrels of storage capacity for NGLs, crude oil, petrochemicals and refined products; and 14 billion cubic feet of natural gas storage capacity. This press release includes 'forward-looking statements' as defined by the Securities and Exchange Commission. All statements, other than statements of historical fact, included herein that address activities, events, developments or transactions that Enterprise and its general partner expect, believe or anticipate will or may occur in the future are forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from expectations, including required approvals by regulatory agencies, the possibility that the anticipated benefits from such activities, events, developments or transactions cannot be fully realized, the possibility that costs or difficulties related thereto will be greater than expected, the impact of competition, and other risk factors included in Enterprise's reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of their dates. Except as required by law, Enterprise does not intend to update or revise its forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store