Home Textiles Swiss Envoy Praises Bangladesh RMG Sustainability at 4A Yarn Dyeing Plant

Swiss Envoy Praises Bangladesh RMG Sustainability at 4A Yarn Dyeing Plant

by Bangladesh in Focus

The Swiss ambassador visited 4A Yarn Dyeing Limited in Baipail, Savar, and praised the factory’s sustainable practices and modern production systems, noting it as a strong example for Bangladesh’s ready-made garment sector. The plant is an internationally certified green factory that makes high-end outerwear for brands in Switzerland and other markets. Visitors saw neat production areas, cleaner waste handling, and plans that aim to lower environmental harm while keeping output steady. The factory combines digital design with real-time production monitoring to lift quality and cut material loss. Design teams use AutoCAD to prepare accurate patterns, and an AI-driven solution called Nidle tracks and digitises work on the floor. That mix of tools helps managers spot mistakes quickly and reduce the need to rework garments, which saves time and resources. Team Group says the site already offers jobs for more than five thousand people and sends products worth over seventy million US dollars abroad each year. Company leaders expect exports to grow and have set targets to pass one hundred million dollars as orders increase and efficiency improves. Abdullah Hil Nakib, deputy managing director of Team Group, said the ambassador’s visit shows how good factory practices can change buyer views and open new markets. The envoy welcomed the factory’s sustainability goals and said its methods match priorities that many European buyers now look for in partners. Officials and managers said steady work, cleaner production and clear records help factories win repeat orders, keep workers safer and protect local communities. Practical steps such as green certification, digital tracking and better waste handling are now seen as useful investments rather than extra costs. The factory’s systems also make it easier to check quality and meet strict rules that many global buyers require for imports. Industry observers said the visit could encourage other factories to try similar changes, which would help the whole sector grow in a cleaner way. Simple wins — less waste, more reliable delivery and clearer data — can add up to stronger exports, steady jobs and a better image for Bangladesh makers. Leaders plan to expand training so workers learn new skills for digital tools, safety and quality checks. Management also hopes the ambassador will share his visit report with Swiss buyers to show what good practices look like. Stronger buyer confidence can bring higher value orders and steady work for local suppliers and small businesses linked to the factory. Team Group said it works with more than twenty global brands and aims to grow exports in the near future. With steady rules, local training and careful investment, factories can protect jobs, cut pollution and win long term business. That could boost local incomes. The visit signals steady industry progress.

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