Get the latest news and updates from Dawn
PAKISTAN’S cotton sector has once again entered the season with ambitious official targets and deep uncertainty on the ground. The Federal Committee on Agriculture has set a production target of 9.64 million bales for the 2026-27 crop, to be cultivated on 5.33 million acres, but growers, ginners and textile players remain divided over whether the country can even come close to achieving that figure.
The scepticism is understandable. Last season, Pakistan produced only around 5.6m bales against a target of 10.2m bales, one of the sharpest shortfalls in recent history. Over the years, cotton acreage has steadily shrunk, yields have stagnated, and the country has increasingly relied on imports to keep its textile industry running.
The latest projections by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) paint an equally worrying picture. The USDA estimates Pakistan’s cotton production for the upcoming season at around 6.94m bales, while domestic consumption is projected at 14m bales. That gap means the country may have to import over 7m bales during the year.
The consequences are already visible. Textile mills have started importing cotton from the US and Brazil even before the new ginning season has properly begun. Industry reports suggest Pakistani mills recently bought over 206,000 bales from the US alone, accounting for almost the entire weekly US export sale. The import bill for cotton could cross $1bn this year.










