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Envoy Embraces Robotic Tech To Raise Standards, Output (Demo)

Autoconers process yarns at a factory of Envoy Textile, a spinning and denim fabrics manufacturer in Bhaluka. Autoconer is a robotic machine used in winding process to get high quality yarns with low manpower. Photo: ENVOY TEXTILE
On April 2, 2017, Refayet Ullah Mirdha writes on The Daily Star:

Bangladesh’s apparel manufacturers are increasing the use of modern technologies to boost productivity, deliver products on time and meet demand for finer products from global retailers and brands.

Some local fabrics manufacturers have even gone one step further, as they are using robotic technology and machinery.

Envoy Textiles Ltd (ETL) is one such denim fabrics manufacturer which is using robotic machinery to raise output and improve the quality of products.

“The use of robotic technology ensures higher productivity and good quality of yarn. Although the initial investment in sophisticated technologies is high, at the end of the day it is feasible for us, thanks to increased productivity and improved quality,” said Kutubuddin Ahmed, chairman of Envoy Group.

The world’s first platinum rated LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certified denim factory, ETL installed the robotic machinery in its spinning section in October last year to bring sophistication to yarn production.

The company, set up in 2008 in Bhaluka, produces four million yards of denim fabrics a month and employs 2,400 people.

Apart from using many other latest machinery for spinning and weaving, ETL has employed 14 robotic autoconers in spinning and rotor at its Bhaluka factory to produce 55 tonnes of denim yarn per day, said Kutubuddin Ahmed, chairman of Envoy Group.

The company has jumped on the bandwagon of the latest global trend in manufacturing of spinning of yarn from long ropes of cotton in the finest possible way.

“If yarn is torn during the spinning, the robot will instantly piece it together and thus continue the production without interruption,” said Ahmed while explaining the benefit of robotic technology.

“Such kind of finer job by human touch is almost impossible. If it is carried out manually it takes a lot of time and a lot of people to perform the task,” he said.

Usually, a machine and more than 10 workers are needed to do the tedious job, which also causes loss of money and time, according to an operator of ETL. With a robotic machine in place, a single person is enough to oversee the production process as everything is automated, said Ahmed. However there are some experts to operate the system.

The chairman of ETL, a listed company, said he is using sophisticated machinery in every stage of the production at his factory.

The company plans to set up a denim garment manufacturing plant in a year either on ETL’s premises or near the denim spinning and fabrics manufacturing plant to produce clothing items from its own fabrics.

The company will invest more than Tk 50 crore in the proposed factory. Currently, ETL supplies yarn and fabrics to local and international buyers.

The company exports yarn and fabrics to more than 10 countries such as Egypt, Sri Lanka, India, Germany, Indonesia, Kenya, China, Turkey, Cambodia and Nepal.

Ahmed, one of the pioneers in the rope denim industry, said the future of denim business is bright globally thanks to changes in fashion and style. However, denim is also facing challenges from other apparel products.

He said the denim industry in Bangladesh would grow further as new entrepreneurs are entering into the sub-sector with big investment plans.  Currently, Bangladesh has 30 denim mills with annual production capacity of 435 million yards and the total investment is more than $1 billion.

Annual demand for denim products is 800 million yards and the number of denim garment factories is 530 in Bangladesh. The size of the global denim market is more than $56.20 billion and is expected to reach $64.10 billion by 2020.

Bangladesh is the largest denim exporter to the EU and the third largest to the US. Denim export is expected to fetch $7 billion a year for the country.

Photo of an apparel factory with almost no humans — everything is automated with cutting edge technology. This isn’t in the US or China, it’s Bangladesh.

“Envoy Textiles Ltd (ETL) is one such denim fabrics manufacturer which is using robotic machinery to raise output and improve the quality of products.”

The non-human means of production (what economists term “capital”) will exponentially destroy jobs and in the process create a increasingly large labor pool who cannot participate productively in the economy and, as a result, devalue the worth of labor for masses of people.

Understanding that the basic principle of an economy is that the purpose of production is consumption, it is impossible to consume what has not been produced. Consequently — all things being equal — the only way to consume is to produce.

If you want to consume, then, you must either produce for your own consumption, or to exchange what you produce for what others produce that you wish to consume.

As capital advances, labor’s contribution becomes smaller. Obviously, then, as capital takes over more and more of the share of production, it becomes essential that people own capital as well as labor.

The solution that binary economist Louis Kelso developed was for people to purchase capital that pays for itself out of its own future profits. Instead of cutting consumption to save and then purchase capital, you first purchase capital, increase production, and then save.

The promise to pay tomorrow for what you purchase today can be embodied in a contract, and the contract can be used as money to purchase the capital. The only requirement is that all the parties to the contract are reasonably assured that everyone keeps all the promises that were made. In this way capital can pay for itself without the new owner first having to save, as a matter of fact, is virtually impossible for the vast majority of people.

Support Monetary Justice at http://capitalhomestead.org/page/monetary-justice.

Support the Capital Homestead Act (aka Economic Democracy Act) at http://www.cesj.org/learn/capital-homesteading/, http://www.cesj.org/learn/capital-homesteading/capital-homestead-act-a-plan-for-getting-ownership-income-and-power-to-every-citizen/, http://www.cesj.org/learn/capital-homesteading/capital-homestead-act-summary/ and http://www.cesj.org/learn/capital-homesteading/ch-vehicles/.

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