By
Fibre2Fashion
Published
Mar 27, 2017
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

New pashmina dehairing plant to come to Leh

By
Fibre2Fashion
Published
Mar 27, 2017

A new Pashmina dehairing plant will be installed at Leh to increase dehairing capacity and improve its quality. The new plant will ensure better value addition through the latest technologies and dehairing machine. It will also increase pashmina procurement and ensure better returns to pashmina breeders, said Ajay Tamta, minister of state, textiles.


The new Leh plant will increase pashmina procurement and ensure better returns to pashmina breeders, said Ajay Tamta, minister of state, textiles


The ministry of textiles is also implementing two schemes under 12th Five Year Plan programme, namely – Pashmina Promotion Programme (P-3) and Pashmina Wool Development Scheme (PWDS) – in Leh, and Kargil in the Ladakh region of the state of Jammu & Kashmir, said Tamta.

He also said that value addition of pashmina wool through spinning and weaving is being carried out by distribution of handloom and spinning wheel (charkha). Its objectives are to introduce processing facility of pashmina wool after dehairing process, ensure value addition of pashmina wool in Leh, increase the income of Pashmina breeders with primary spinning facility and create employment opportunity for the youth especially women.

The Central Wool Development Board (CWDB) in Jodhpur, has sanctioned two short term training projects (of one year duration) each in favour of Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council (LAHDC), Leh  and Kargil districts, under which 40 trainees are trained  in 4 batches of 3 months duration in each project for training in manufacturing of Woollen Handloom Products. Under this project, provision has also been made to provide looms/charkas to each trainee for self-employment generation with financial support of Rs 10,000 per set of loom/charka. An expenditure of Rs 6.27 lakh and Rs 19.81 lakh has been incurred in the year 2015-16 and 2016-17, respectively for these projects.

Further, in order to develop handloom products, including pashmina products, the government through the office of the development commissioner for handlooms, has sanctioned four Block Level Clusters. This includes North Srinagar, Anchar, Safakadal and Ilahi Bagh in 2015-16 and 2016-17 and has released an amount of Rs 1.68 crore as first instalment.

Under Block Level Cluster, a component of National Handloom Development Programme, financial assistance is provided for setting up of Common Facility Centre/Dye House in clusters sanctioned in the country, including mountain states. Block Level Cluster approach was introduced in June 2015 and duration of its implementation is three years, added Tamta.

Copyright © 2024 Fibre2Fashion. All rights reserved.