Cotton arrival in Pakistan registered an improvement of 9% as of August 31, 2025, compared to the same period of the previous year, according to data released by the Pakistan Cotton Ginner’s Association (PCGA) on Wednesday.
As per the report, total cotton arrival in Pakistan clocked in at 1.336 million bales compared to 1.226 million bales recorded on August 31, 2024, an increase of 0.11 million bales.
Despite the improvement, experts warn of looming risks as floods have inundated large swathes of fertile lands, particularly in Punjab, damaging key crops such as rice, sugarcane, maize, vegetables, and cotton.
Cotton losses in particular threaten the textile industry, which makes up more than half of Pakistan’s exports, especially at a time when the country faces a 19% US tariff in its biggest market.
Ghasharib Shoukat, co-founder of commodities platform Zarai Mandi warned wheat, vegetable, and cotton shortages would ripple through supply chains, hurting exports and household budgets.
As per the latest PCGA data, cotton arrival saw improvement from both Punjab and Sindh.
As of August 31, cotton arrival in Punjab clocked in at 0.466 million bales as compared to 0.453 million bales clocked in during the same period last year, an increase of 3%.
Similarly, cotton arrival in Sindh also improved by 13% at 0.870 million bales compared to 0.773 million bales registered in SPLY.
Pakistan’s textile manufacturers expect cotton imports to surge to as much as $3 billion this year, double last year’s bill, after floods devastated key growing areas in Punjab and now threaten Sindh, industry officials and analysts said.
The monsoon deluges, which have already swamped central Punjab, the nation’s breadbasket, are moving south toward Sindh, the country’s second-largest cotton belt, raising fears that further damage to fields will deepen losses in the days ahead. Agriculture makes up nearly a quarter of GDP and employs almost half of the labor force, according to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.
“Probably, our cotton import can exceed $2.5 to $3 billion this year alone,” said Kamran Arshad, chairman of the All Pakistan Textile Mills Association (APTMA), adding that millers imported $1.5 billion worth of cotton last year from Brazil, the United States, Africa and Australia.
Arshad said cotton-growing areas in central Punjab such as Vehari, Mailsi, Chichawatni and Burewala had been “negatively affected,” while some genetically modified Bt cotton crops were also under water.
“This can lead to a crisis, because a lot of people will be losing their livelihoods. Their crops will be at stake,” he said, urging the government to declare a national emergency and curb luxury imports to conserve foreign exchange.
He also blamed record water releases from upstream India for compounding the devastation. Under the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty, India controls the eastern rivers but is required to notify Pakistan of dam discharges that can cause downstream flooding.
Flood damage has also undermined projections for Pakistan’s top export industry, which earned $18 billion last year.
“We were projecting a growth in textile exports from $18 billion to up to $20 billion in the coming year, but I don’t think that level will be achieved because of the unavailability of cotton and the higher cost of production,” said Ahsan Mehanti, chief executive of Arif Habib Commodities.
He estimated the industry could face a $6 billion hit, including about $4 billion in additional import costs and $2 billion in lost export potential. “This flood will have a devastating impact not only on cotton output but the exchange rate will equally be impacted,” Mehanti said.
Analysts warned Pakistan may lose up to five million bales from this year’s 10.2 million bale production target, with overall output falling below last year’s seven million.
“The government’s target to produce 5.5 million bales in Punjab does not seem achievable now … cotton output may not exceed 4.5 million bales if flooding increases,” said Naseem Usman, chairman of the Karachi Cotton Brokers Forum.
Official data confirm the downturn. Pakistan’s cotton production as of Aug. 15 had already contracted by more than 17 percent to 887,401 bales, compared with 1.1 million a year earlier, according to a Sept. 2 report by the Pakistan Central Cotton Committee.
Usman said consumption would remain higher than domestic output, forcing Pakistan to rely heavily on imports that could exceed $2 billion, including raw cotton, seed and oil for animal feed.