Piyush Goyal Urges
Leather Industry to Triple Exports to USD 15 Billion Through FTAs and Global
Expansion
Ø Industry should aim for three-fold growth
by leveraging FTAs and diversifying export markets
Ø UK FTA to come into force on 15 July;
legal scrub of EU FTA expected to be completed in next 15-20 days
Ø Leather sector can expand employment from
over 40 lakh people to 1 crore
Ø Industry should strengthen leather development
centres and forge partnerships with NID, Indian Institute of Packaging, QCI and
BIS
·
Union
Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush
Goyal urged the leather and footwear industry to triple exports to at least USD 15
billion within five to seven years, up from the current USD 4–4.5 billion.
·
He
said India's recently concluded and upcoming Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) provide a
historic opportunity for rapid export growth.
·
Key
FTA developments:
o
The
India–UK FTA
will come into force on 15
July.
o
The
India–EU FTA
legal review ("legal scrub") is expected to be completed within 15–20 days.
o
Mr.
Goyal will visit Brussels,
Spain and Finland with a business delegation to promote Indian
products.
·
He
said India's FTAs now provide access to:
o
38
developed countries
through newly concluded agreements.
o
50
countries
including ASEAN, Japan and South Korea.
o
Potential
expansion to 60 countries
through negotiations with Canada, GCC, Mexico, Brazil, SACU, Israel, Eurasia,
Central Asia, Russia, Chile and Ecuador.
·
The
Minister noted that 77% of
India's leather exports are concentrated in only 15 countries
and urged exporters to diversify into new developed markets.
·
He
encouraged exporters to look beyond major markets such as the U.S., UK, Germany and Italy
and target smaller developed economies where demand for premium footwear and
designer brands is growing.
·
He
highlighted vast opportunities beyond footwear, including:
o
Bags
o
Wallets
o
Jackets
o
Apparel
o
Saddles
o
Upholstery
o
Furniture
o
Luxury
wall coverings
o
Sports
goods and medical applications.
·
The
Export Promotion Mission
will support the industry through:
o
Overseas
exhibitions.
o
Business
delegations.
o
Warehousing
facilities.
o
International
marketing initiatives.
o
Assistance
for MSMEs.
·
Mr.
Goyal suggested establishing overseas warehouses similar to Bharat Mart in Dubai to
facilitate faster deliveries and improve global market access.
·
He
emphasized that future competitiveness depends on:
o
Better
product quality.
o
Higher
standards.
o
Superior
finishing.
o
Modern
design.
o
Packaging.
o
Brand
building.
o
Large-scale
manufacturing.
·
The
Minister urged companies to use the best
available testing laboratories and equipment, including
facilities of:
o
Bureau
of Indian Standards (BIS)
o
National
testing laboratories.
o
Universities.
·
He
stressed that Indian consumers should receive products meeting the same high
standards as exports.
·
The
leather sector currently employs over
40 lakh people, and he challenged the industry to expand
employment to one crore
workers.
·
Mr.
Goyal proposed that industry should:
o
Take
over management of India's 12
leather development centres, or
o
Consolidate
them into fewer, more efficient centres to improve
training quality.
·
He
encouraged collaboration with:
o
National
Institute of Design (NID) for design.
o
Indian
Institute of Packaging
for packaging.
o
Quality
Council of India (QCI)
for quality certification.
o
Bureau
of Indian Standards (BIS) for standards development.
·
Sustainability
should become a competitive advantage through:
o
Recycling
waste and water.
o
Proper
effluent treatment.
o
Renewable
energy usage.
o
Sustainability
certifications.
·
The
Minister encouraged adoption of Artificial
Intelligence (AI) and robotics for:
o
Design
development.
o
Demand
forecasting.
o
Precision
manufacturing.
o
Productivity
improvements without reducing employment.
·
He
said products manufactured using renewable energy could command premium prices
in international markets.
·
Quoting
Prime Minister Narendra
Modi, Mr. Goyal said India can become a global champion in leather and footwear
exports by combining traditional craftsmanship with research,
development and modern technology.
·
He
highlighted India's 7,000-year-old
leather-making tradition, tracing it back to the Indus Valley Civilisation,
and urged the industry to take pride in India's artisans and craftsmanship.
·
The
Minister noted that around
40% of the sector's workforce comprises women and encouraged
companies to invest in employee welfare while positioning exporters as
ambassadors of Brand India.
[ABS News Service/07.07.2026]
Union Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal today called upon the
leather and footwear industry to target at least USD 15 billion in exports over
the next five to six years, or even earlier, and aim for a three-fold increase in
its export performance by leveraging new Free Trade Agreements (FTAs), diversifying
markets and strengthening quality, design, branding, sustainability and scale.
Addressing the Council for Leather Exports National Export Excellence Awards
for 2024-25 in New Delhi, Mr. Goyal said the sector, currently exporting goods worth
around USD 4-4.5 billion, has the potential to achieve tremendous transformation.
He urged the industry to set ambitious targets for the coming years. “If I was in
your shoes, or in your leather shoes, if I may say so, I would not aspire for anything
less than a 3x outcome in the next five to seven years,” he said, adding that the
industry could target USD 15 billion in exports.
The Minister said enabling conditions had been created for the sector to
achieve much bigger outcomes. He noted that India today has high-quality products,
highly experienced artisans, cobblers and workers, and industry leaders with the
experience and ability to think big, dream big and achieve big.
Mr. Goyal said the FTAs finalised by India were opening the doors to 38 developed
countries and creating significant new opportunities for the leather and footwear
sector. He said the UK FTA would come into force on 15 July. Referring to the EU
FTA, he said he had held a very good conversation with his counterpart in the European
Union in Brussels on Sunday and that both sides were working together to complete
the legal scrub within the next 15-20 days.
The Minister said he would meet his EU counterpart on 14 and 15 July in Brussels.
He said he would travel with a delegation of businesspersons to Brussels, Spain
and Finland, as India had already begun marketing Indian products, goods and services
and taking business delegations abroad to ensure that the country and its industry
were future-ready.
Mr. Goyal said the industry must be ready to derive the maximum benefit from
the FTAs India has finalised and from the new markets in developed countries that
have opened up for the sector. He said the time was right for the industry to aim
big and aspire for much greater achievements.
Calling for diversification of export destinations, the Minister said 77
per cent of India’s leather exports currently go to only 15 countries. He said the
time had come to diversify across the world. Apart from the 38 developed countries
whose markets had been opened up, India already has FTAs with the 10 ASEAN countries,
Japan and Korea, taking the number to 50 countries, he said.
Mr. Goyal said India was in dialogue with Canada and expressed the hope that
this could be concluded by the end of the year, taking the number to 51. In the
Gulf Cooperation Council region, India already has FTAs with Oman and the UAE and
is negotiating with a six-country bloc, which could add four more countries and
take the number to 55. India is also talking to Mexico, which would take the number
to 56, and to Brazil and three other countries associated with it, taking the number
to 60, he said.
The Minister also referred to engagement with the SACU region, including
South Africa and neighbouring countries, as well as Israel, Eurasia, Central Asia,
Russia and Chile. He said many countries wanted to enter into FTAs and comprehensive
economic partnerships with India, adding that Ministers from Ecuador had also expressed
interest in an FTA. Countries across the world, he said, were today excited to do
business with India.
Mr. Goyal urged the industry not to focus only on large markets such as the
USA, UK, Germany and Italy, while acknowledging the huge potential in these countries.
He said exporters must also look at smaller developed countries, where consumers
buy and replace footwear and where designer brands have a market. Indian designer
brands, he said, should be introduced in these countries.
The Minister said the potential extended far beyond footwear to bags, wallets,
horse saddles, jackets, clothing and apparel. He said there were few industries
with as wide a range of applications as leather, noting that leather was used in
almost every aspect of life.
He cited applications ranging from operating theatres in hospitals to sports,
including cricket, football and hockey grounds and stadiums. He also referred to
boots, wallets, belts, watches, watch straps and caps, saying the list of applications
was endless.
Mr. Goyal further highlighted the use of leather in upholstery, including
furniture and high-end wall coverings, and said the industry catered to a vast range
of products and price points, from around ₹100-200 to USD 100 upholstery products.
“The sky is the limit when it comes to the potential of your industry,” he said.
The Minister said the Export Promotion Mission was willing to extend every
possible assistance required by the industry, including support for taking delegations
across the world and organising exhibitions internationally. Noting that the industry
had an exhibition in India in September, he urged it to plan an exhibition every
month in one or another developed country and seek to capture markets across the
world.
Mr. Goyal said the industry should use the Export Promotion Mission for warehousing,
better and more frequent delegations and exhibitions in major markets. He called
upon exporters to take delegations to every country in the world and assured them
that such initiatives would be approved. He said micro and small units would also
be supported in participating in these efforts.
The Minister urged the industry to come forward with new ideas on how the
Government and industry could work together to take Indian businesses and products
to the rest of the world. He said the sector could explore warehouses similar to
Bharat Mart in Dubai and hire warehouses in other developed countries to facilitate
just-in-time delivery.
Mr. Goyal identified better quality, an even greater focus on standards,
finishing, designing, packaging and brand building as the areas that would define
the sector’s future. He specifically requested the industry to begin focusing strongly
on brand building and to pursue better design and larger scale so that enterprises
could enjoy the benefits of economies of scale.
The Minister urged the sector to identify and use the best testing equipment.
He said he had been urging industry in every engagement to identify the best equipment
and laboratories near their clusters, whether those were BIS, NTA or other government
laboratories or university facilities.
Mr. Goyal said the industry should not settle for anything second-best and
should seek the best laboratory and testing equipment to help certify Indian leather
products for the rest of the world. He added that Indian consumers deserved no less
and should also benefit from very high-quality products made by the industry.
The Minister said the sector already employs more than 40 lakh, or over four million, people and asked whether this could
rise to one crore. He said it was possible and added that as the sector grew in
economic size, it would also benefit from economies of scale.
Mr. Goyal referred to his earlier suggestion that the industry should take
a close look at India’s leather institutes and development centres. Noting that
many companies were exporting goods worth ₹200 crore or ₹300 crore,
he asked why each large unit could not take responsibility for one of the country’s
12 leather development centres or campuses.
He said the Government was willing to hand over the management of these centres
fully to the industry for training workers. Alternatively, he suggested that the
industry consider reducing the number of centres from 12 to three or four so that
they could function efficiently. He said limited resources had been spread too thinly,
making the centres irrelevant and inefficient.
The Minister said these decisions should be taken by the industry because
the Government was a listening government and wanted stakeholders to participate
in decision-making. He said the Government, in fact, wanted the industry to take
these decisions because the centres existed for the sector.
Mr. Goyal said the Government could only play a hand-holding and enabling
role, while the industry ultimately had to derive the maximum benefit from the centres.
He urged the industry either to take them up or merge them, identify which centres
were useful, consult other stakeholders, both big and small, and increase student
enrolment so that the campuses could provide better talent to businesses.
The Minister urged the industry to tie up with the National Institute of
Design (NID) for design, the Indian Institute of Packaging for packaging, the Quality
Council of India (QCI) for better quality output and improved testing laboratories,
and the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) to improve product standards.
He said Indian products sold globally and domestically should meet the same
high-quality standards. Workers, he said, should be certified and trained for the
best output, while factories should have the best equipment for large-scale, modern
and high-quality production, provide a safe working environment and give prominence
to safety.
Mr. Goyal also urged the industry to focus on sustainability to obtain better
value for its products. He called for recycling waste, water and effluents and treating
them appropriately so that Indian leather products could gain greater value as sustainably
manufactured goods.
Mr. Goyal said the industry today operated in an age of robotics and Artificial
Intelligence and could learn significantly from both. He said AI could be used to
study designs from the past, noting that fashion trends often return every 10-15
years.
The Minister said robotics, when used in critical functions requiring high
precision, did not take away jobs but added jobs. If precision improved and markets
grew, more jobs would be created, he said. He added that technology could improve
demand forecasting and design, and reiterated that better demand forecasting could
significantly help the industry.
Mr. Goyal said products manufactured using renewable energy could command
greater value in international markets through sustainability certification.
The Minister said the world was looking towards Indian exporters and that
FTAs involved two-way trade. Partner countries, he said, were equally keen to trade
with India and engage with the country. They saw India as a trusted partner and
were looking to Indian businesses to meet their requirements for high-quality, sustainable
and safely produced goods that benefited from economies of scale and were available
at competitive and affordable prices.
Quoting Prime Minister Mr. Narendra Modi, Mr. Goyal said, “We can become
a global champion in leather and footwear exports by leveraging research and development
and our traditional craftsmanship with modern technology.” He said following this
mantra could lead the sector towards much greater achievements.
The Minister said leather-making was a 7,000-year-old art and that traces
of it could be found in the Indus Valley Civilisation. The story of footwear and
leather, he said, was intertwined with the story of Bharat.
He called upon the industry to take pride in India’s artisans and craftsmen
and in the country’s ability to capture global markets with high-quality products.
He also highlighted the sector’s contribution towards greater self-reliance in India
and better quality for both Indian consumers and the world, adding that the achievements
of exporters made the country proud.
Mr. Goyal said the day was special as it marked the 125th birth anniversary
of Dr. Syama Prasad Mookerjee. He described Dr. Mookerjee as a true nationalist
and freedom fighter who sacrificed his ministerial position as a Cabinet Minister
in the first Government of India after Independence.
Mr. Goyal said Dr. Mookerjee strongly believed in a self-reliant India that
took care of its own needs and strengthened its industrial base, both big and small,
to become independent of reliance on foreign countries.
Congratulating the award winners, Mr. Goyal urged exporters to consider themselves
not merely as exporters but as ambassadors of Brand India. He said every exporter
was providing jobs and transforming the lives of the country’s brothers and sisters.
The Minister noted that around 40 per cent of those working in the sector
were women and urged companies to reflect on how they cared for their workforce.
The Minister said such measures might appear small but could transform the
way companies function.