India has backed calls for a balanced outcome on cotton at the World Trade Organization (WTO), saying issues such as local support, market access and development assistance need to be addressed together. India reiterated it already offers dutyfree access for cotton from least-developed countries. In contrast, major players including the US and the EU said a decision on cotton should be part of a broader pact on farm reform and not a separate one.
These positions were discussed during the 24th Dedicated Discussion on Cotton undertheWTOCommitteeon Agriculture, heldinNovember 2025 and formally reported by the WTO Secretariat on 21 January, as members intensified consultations ahead of the 14th WTO Ministerial Conference (MC14) scheduled for later this year in Cameroon.
Thediscussionshighlighted why cotton remains a sensitive issue in global trade talks, as it is a key livelihood crop supporting millions of small farmers in countries across Africa and parts of Asia. At the same time, it remains one of the most heavily subsidised agricultural commodities, mainly by large producing nations, according to a WTO paper reviewedbyMint.
Per the document, India told members cotton remains critical for livelihoods and rural development in developing and least-developed countries (LDCs), and that progress on the issue has been limited despite long-standing mandates dating back to the Bali and Nairobi ministerial decisions. It said India provides duty-free access on all cotton tariff lines and covers 98.2% of tariff lines for imports from LDCs, while calling for sharperdiscipline on trade-distorting subsidies by major producers. India is the world's secondlargest cotton producer, accounting for around a quarter of global output, with the cropgrownonabout13million hectares and supporting nearly 60 million people.
India’s cotton output has seen fluctuations in recent seasons. Total cotton output in the 2024-25 season was 29.4 million bales (170 kg each), lower than 33.6 million bales in 2022-23 and 31.1 million bales in 2021-22. Total cotton availability, including opening stocks and imports, was at 35.74 million bales up to the end of the 2024-25 cotton season on 30 September 2025.
Cotton exports for 2024-25 are pegged at 1.8 million bales, reflecting relatively subdued overseas shipments amid tighter local supply and global volatility, per India Brand Equity Foundation report.
India’s total cotton demand was 35.45 million bales in FY24 and fell marginally to 33.60 million in FY25, according to the textiles ministry.
Trade experts said the debatehasemergedasalitmus test for whether the MC14 can deliver meaningful outcomes for developing and least-developed nations. MC14 is slated for 26- 29 March in Cameroon.
Πηγή: Mint Mumbai