BIS Certification for Pashmina Products
[Min of Textiles Press Release dated 2 August 2019]
Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) has published
an Indian Standard for identification, marking and labelling of Pashmina products
to certify its purity. The Standard is being released in Leh,
on 2 August 2019.
In a message Union Minister of Textiles and Women
and Child Development, Smriti Zubin
Irani said that the certification will help curb the adulteration
of Pashmina and also protect the interests of local artisans and nomads who are
the producers of Pashmina raw material. It will also assure the purity of Pashmina
for customers.
Smriti Zubin Irani
said that BIS certification of Pashmina will go a long way in discouraging counterfeit
or substandard products presently mislabeled and sold as genuine Pashmina in the
market.
Textiles Minister further said that it is a step
in the right direction and will ensure better prices for the goat herding community
in Ladakh as well as for the local handloom artisans producing
genuine Pashmina products, currently a disadvantaged lot due to rampant marketing
malpractices.
The nomadic Pashmina herders live in the hostile
and tough terrain of Changthang and are solely dependent
on Pashmina for their livelihood. At present, there are 2400 families rearing 2.5
lakh goats. This initiative of hallmarking Pashmina will protect the interests of
these families, motivate the younger generation to continue in this profession as
well as encourage more families to take up this occupation.
Ladakh produces 50 MT of the finest grade of Pashmina in the world (12-15
microns) and this initiative will provide further impetus towards value addition
of Pashmina in Ladakh. Ministry of Textiles is processing a proposal
for funding of Rs. 20 crore for a de-hairing plant for Leh which along
with this initiative will lead to progress in the Pashmina sector in Ladakh.
The Changthangi or Pashmina
goat, is a special breed of goat indigenous to the high altitude regions of Ladakh in Jammu and Kashmir. They are raised for ultra-fine
cashmere wool, known as Pashmina once woven. The Textiles are handspun and were
first woven in Kashmir. The Changthangi goat grows a thick,
warn undercoat which is the source of Kashmir Pashmina wool – the world’s finest
cashmere measuring between 12-15 microns in fiber thickness.
These goats are generally domesticated and reared
by nomadic communities called the Changpa in the Changthang region of Greater Ladakh.
The Changthangi goats have revitalized the economy of
Changthang, Leh and Ladakh region.