78th Plenary meeting

1 December, 2019 - 5 December, 2019 , Brisbane, Australia

78th Plenary Meeting of the ICAC

01 December 2019 – 05 December 2019 , Brisbane, Australia

Final Statement
English    Arabic    French    Russian    Spanish
Link to the website developed by the Organising Commitee
Agenda and Presentations
Sunday 1 December
9.00 – 12.00
Meeting of SEEP
13.00 – 14.30
Meeting of CSITC
15.00 – 16.30
Meeting of ICRA
13.30 – 16.30
Registration desk on Conference Level open
Monday 2 December
7.00
Registration desk on Conference Level open
Please register at the desk in plenty of time for start of Inaugural Session
8.30 – 10.00
Inaugural Session
Master of Ceremony:  Richard Haire, Chairman, Cotton Research & Development Corporation
    • Welcome to the Country – Nunukul Yuggera Aboriginal Dance Company
    • Welcoming remarks from Australia – Dr Alison McMorrow, Assistant Secretary, Agricultural Policy Division, Department of Agriculture
    • Welcoming remarks on behalf of all delegates from Côte d’Ivoire host of the 77th Plenary Meeting – Dr Adama Coulibaly, Director General, Cashew & Cotton Council of Côte d’Ivoire
    • Report of the Chair ad interim of the Standing Committee – Ms Maha Zakaria, Commercial Counsellor, Economic and Commercial Office, Embassy of Arab Republic of Egypt. (ArabicEnglishFrenchRussianSpanish)
    • Report of the Executive Director – Mr Kai Hughes.  (ArabicEnglishFrenchRussianSpanish)
    • Recognition of the ICAC Researcher of the Year, 2019
    • Approval of the Agenda of the 78th Plenary Meeting
10.00 – 10.30
Global Megatrends for Cotton – Challenges and Opportunities? 
Dr Steve Hatfield-Dodds, Executive Director, ABARES, Department of Agriculture, Australia
10.30 – 11.00
Refreshment Break
11.00 – 15.15
First Open Session: Traceability Seminar
Download the Minutes of the First Open Session (part 1) (part 2)
Chair:  Dr Steve Hatfield- Dodds, Executive Director, ABARES
11.00 – 11.30
Megatrends to Stretch Future Thinking
Ms Leanne Kemp, Chief Entrepreneur, Queensland Government, Australia.
11.30 – 11.50
The Australian Government Department of Agriculture and the Future of Traceability: Roles & Responsibilities.
Dr Ann McDonald, Assistant Secretary, Export Legislation Taskforce & Traceability Project, Department of Agriculture, Australia.
11.50 – 12.10
Getting Started With Blockchain.
Ms Emma Weston, CEO and Co-Founder, AgriDigital, Australia
12.10 – 12.30
The Pros and Cons of Mass Balance.
Mr Alan McClay, CEO, Better Cotton Initiative, Switzerland
12.30 – 13.45
Lunch – Thyme 2 Restaurant, Sofitel Brisbane
13.45 – 15.15
First Open Session: Traceability Seminar (continued)
Download the Minutes of the First Open Session (part 2)
Chair/Facilitator:  Mr Allan Williams, General. Manager, R & D Investment, Cotton Research & Development Corporation, Australia
Presenters:
    • Mr Sandon Adams, Managing Director – Australia, Oritain Global Limited, Australia.
      Download the presentation
    • Ms Jannice Cameron-Chapital, Chief Marketing Office, Himatsingka America, USA &?Ms MeiLin Wan, Vice President, Applied DNA Sciences,USA.
      Download the presentation
    • Mr Shannon Mercer, Director of Business Development, FibreTrace, Australia.
      Download the presentation
Panellists:
    • Mr Arthur Spellson, Marketing Manager – Cotton, Auscott, Australia
    • Ms Liesl Truscott, Director, Europe and Materials Strategy, Textile Exchange, UK
    • Mr Alan McClay, CEO, Better Cotton Initiative, Switzerland
15.15 – 15.45
Refreshment Break
15.45 – 17.00
First Plenary Session
Chair:  Dr Alison McMorrow, Assistant Secretary – Agricultural Policy Division – Department of Agriculture, Australia
Discussion of Government Reports.
International Organisations
17.00 – 17.30
Discussion of Working Paper – Technical Seminar 2020
Download the Working Paper (ArabicEnglishFrenchRussianSpanish)
Welcome Reception
18.00
Board coaches from Sofitel Brisbane lobby for Welcome Reception. Please board the coach on time.
18.30 – 20.30
The Watermall, Queensland Art Gallery.  About 1.4 km from Conference venue (20 minutes). Transport provided from the Sofitel
Tuesday 3 December
9.00 – 10.30
Second Open Session: Disruptive Technologies
Chair: Emeritus Professor Les Copeland, Director, Cotton Research & Development Corporation, Australia
Clothing Fibre Pollution: Separating Fact, Fiction and Forecasts
Dr Mark Browne, Senior Research Associate, University of New South Wales, Australia
The Effect of Fabric Composition on Microfiber Release During Laundering and Aquatic Biodegradation
Prof. Richard Venditti, Department of Forest Biomaterials, North Carolina State University, USA
Download the presentation
What Does a Circular Economy Mean for Cotton?
Dr Alice Payne, Associate Professor in Fashion in the School of Design, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
Download the presentation
Soil Your Undies!
Dr Oliver Knox, Senior Lecturer, School of Environmental and Rural Science, University of New England, Australia
Download the presentation
First Breakout Session: Promoting Innovation and Building Community Resilience in Agriculture – The Role of Diversity
Chair: Dr Colleen McMillan, Senior Research Scientist, CSIRO, Australia
Partnering for Commercialisation: Turning Great Ideas into Impact
Dr Michaela Cosijns, Team Leader, Livelihoods & Adaptive Development Team, Decision Support & Planning Group, CSIRO, Australia
Download the presentation
Plant Breeding Innovations in India: Employment, Economic and Social Benefits
Dr Dharminder Pathak, Professor, Punjab Agricultural University, India
Download the presentation
Fostering and Tracking Innovation at Field Level
Mr Alan McClay, CEO, Better Cotton Initiative, Switzerland
Download the presentation
Diversity Drives Innovation
Ms Eimear McDonagh, General Manager of Export Marketing and Logistics, Namoi Cotton Alliance, Australia
Download the presentation
10.30 – 11.00
Refreshment Break
11.00 – 12.30
Third Open Session: Germplasm Exchange 
Chair: Dr Jeremy Burdon, Director, Cotton Research & Development Corporation, Australia
A potted History of Cotton Breeding
Dr Kater Hake, Vice President, Agricultural & Environmental Research, North Carolina Cotton Incorporated, USA
Exploiting Genetic Variation of Gossypium Germplasm for Cotton Improvement
Dr John Zhihong Yu, Research Geneticist, USDA-ARS, College Station, Texas (ICAC Researcher of the Year), USA
Diversity, Germplasm information and Exchange
Dr Michel Fok, CIRAD and Chair, ICRA, France
Download the presentation
Cotton Germplasm Resources: Development and Exchange
Dr. Ibrokhim Abdurakhmonov, Minister of Innovative Development, Uzbekistan
Second Breakout Session: Supporting Change – What is the Value Proposition for Farmers?
Chair: Mr Allan Williams, General Manager, R & D Investment, Cotton Research & Development Corporation, Australia
Building Consensus on Sustainability Goals and Measurements Across Agricultural Commodities; The Case of Cotton and Coffee
Dr Francesca Mancini, Sustainable Agricultural Specialist, Delta Project, Australia
Download the presentation
Market Access and Environmental Outcomes in the Sugar Industry: Lessons for Cotton from Other Sectors in Queensland
Dr Adrian Volders, Chairman, Queensland Trust for Nature (QTFN), Australia
Download the presentation
Recent Eco-agronomic Technologies and Potential for Economic Returns in Small Holder Farms
Dr (Mrs.) P. Nalayini, Principal Scientist, ICAR-CICR, India
12.30 – 13.45
Lunch – Thyme 2 Restaurant, Sofitel Brisbane
13.45 – 15.15
Fourth Open Session: Reports from ICAC Secretariat
Chair:  Mr Kai Hughes, Executive Director, ICAC, USA
Global Textile Fibres Demand: Trends and Forecast
Ms Lorena Ruiz, Economist, ICAC
Download the presentation
Production and Trade Subsidies Affecting the Cotton Industry
Mr Andrei Guitchounts, Director of Trade Analysis, ICAC, USA
Download the presentation
World Cotton Market Outlook.
Ms Lihan Wei, Statistician, ICAC, USA
Cost of Production – A Global Challenge
Dr Keshav Kranthi, Head of Technical Information, ICAC, USA
15.15 – 15.45
Refreshment Break
15.45 – 17.15
Fifth Open Session: Responding to climate change
Chair: Mr Adam Kay, CEO, Cotton Australia, Australia
Climate Risk Management: Tools, Tips and Barriers
Mr Jon Welsh, Partner, AgEcon
Download the presentation
Will Cotton Win Over Climate Change in the Asian Continent?
Dr A. H. Prakash, Principal Scientist (Plant Physiology) Central Institute for Cotton Research, India
Download the presentation
Enhancing Cotton Productivity in a Changing Climate
Dr Michael Bange, Senior Principal Research Scientist, CSIRO Agriculture and Food, Narrabri
Download the presentation
17:30 – 19:00
Meeting of Private Sector Advisory Panel (PSAP)
Wednesday 4 December
8.30 – 10.00
Sixth Open Session: World Café – Novel Technology Transfer Platforms for Small Holders in Developing Countries
Chair:  Mr Kai Hughes, Executive Director, ICAC, USA
Technology and Agriculture – Exploring the Possibilities
Ms Belinda Dennett, Corporate Affairs Director, Microsoft &?Mr Chris Motton, Director, Advance Computing, Australia
Download the presentation
Reaching Out to Small Holders Through the Soil and Plant Health App
Dr Kater Hake, Vice President, Agricultural and Environmental Research, Cotton Incorporated, USA
Dr Keshav Kranthi, Head, Technical Information Section, ICAC, USA
Download the presentation
Technology Transfer Through Virtual Reality
Mr Mike McCue, Director of Communications, ICAC, USA
Download the presentation
10.00 – 10.30
Refreshment Break
10.30 – 12.00
Sixth Open Session: World Café (continued)
Facilitated Table Discussions
Questions in ArabicEnglishFrenchRussianSpanish
12.00 – 13.00
Lunch – Thyme 2 Restaurant, Sofitel Brisbane
13.00 – 14.30
Seventh Open Session: Breeding and Producing High Yielding and High Quality Cotton Planting Seed: What’s Required?
Chair: Ms Kathryn Adams, Director, Cotton Research & Development Corporation, Australia
Learnings from a Successful Breeding Program: Challenges, Priorities and Realities
Dr Warwick Stiller, Research Group Leader, Cotton Breeding, CSIRO, Australia
Download the presentation
Producing High Quality planting Seed:  The Australian Perspective
Mr Brett Ross, Quality, Research & International Lead, Cotton Seed Distributors, Australia
Download the presentation
Quality Seed for Africa – Opportunities, Challenges and Perspectives
Dr Bruno Bachelier, Cotton Correspondent, CIRAD, France?Authors: Jacques Lançon, Bruno Bachelier, Marc Giband & Romain Loison (CIRAD)
Download the presentation
Third Breakout Session: Robotics and Resource Use Efficiency – Linking Technology, Farmer Needs and Business Models
Chair: Ms Rosemary Richards, Director, Cotton Research & Development Corporation, Australia
Robotics and Artificial Intelligence (AI) for Small Holder Farmers
Mr Muhammad Esa Attia, Robotics Engineer and Technical Product Manager, Agerris, Australia
Download the presentation
The Virtual Irrigation Academy: improving Small Holder Crop Yields Through Better Management of Irrigation Water, Soil Nutrients and Salt
Dr Richard Stirzaker, Research Scientist, Agriculture and Food, CSIRO, Australia
Download the presentation
Capacity Building of Small Farmers – Increase Yield and Enhance Traceability
Mr Anupam Gupta, President, Olam International, Singapore
Download the presentation
14.30 – 16.00
Eighth Open Session: Insect and Weed Resistance Management – the Role of Good Governance
Chair: Ms Susan Maas, R & D Manager, Cotton Research & Development Corporation, Australia
A Socio-ecological Comparison of Resistance Management for Bt Crops on Four Continents
Dr Sharon Downes, Senior Principal Research Scientist, CSIRO Agriculture and Food, Australia
Download the presentation
Managing Resistance Collaboratively: The Australian Experience
Ms Sally Ceeney, Policy Officer, Research Direction and Stewardship, Cotton Australia, Australia
Download the presentation
Real-time Insect Monitoring: Breaking Barriers To Area-wide Management of Pests
Dr Nancy Schellhorn, Co-founder and CEO, RapidAIM, Australia
Download the presentation
Fourth Breakout Session: Ensuring High Quality Fibre – the Role of Best Management Practices and Technology
Chair: Mr Roger Tomkins, Chairman, Australian Cotton Shippers Association, Australia
Assuring Cotton Quality from Field to the Mill: The Importance of an Integrated Approach
Dr René van der Sluijs, Principal Consultant at Textile Technical Services, Australia
Download the presentation
Plastic Contamination Detection and Removal from Seed Cotton
Dr Greg Holt, Research Leader, USDA-ARS, Cotton Production and Processing Research Unit, Lubbock, USA
Download the presentation
Cotton Fibre Quality Response to Best Management Practices
Dr Suzan Sanad, Cotton Research Institute, Egypt
Download the presentation
CONFERENCE DINNER
16.50 – 17.00
Board coaches at the Board coaches at the Sofitel Brisbane Central for Gala Dinner at Australian Outback Spectacular
It is very important you are in Sofitel Brisbane Central lobby on time to board. Coaches must leave on time. If you do not board in time, we’re sorry, but the coaches cannot wait.
Thursday 5 December
9.15 – 10.15
Ninth Open Session: Report back on World Café Outcomes
10.15 – 10.45
Refreshment Break
10.45 – 12.15
Meeting of the Drafting Group (Members only)  
Drafting of the Final Statement
Chair: Mr Kai Hughes, Executive Director, ICAC, USA
Fifth Breakout Session: Meeting the Needs of the Textile Industry
Chair:  Mr Michael Ryan, Department of Agriculture, Australia
Sourcing for Synergy, How the Perspectives of Brands is Changing the Sourcing Landscape
Ms Thea Speechley, Founder & CEO, Raw Assembly, Australia
Download the presentation
Successes, Challenges and Demands on Identity Cottons: Where are we, and where are we headed?
Mr Brent Crossland, Ambassador, Textile Exchange, USA
Download the presentation
Mixed Message
Ms Eimear McDonagh, General Manager – Export Marketing & Logistics, Naomi Cotton Alliance, Australia
Download the presentation
12.15 – 13.30
Lunch – Thyme 2 Restaurant, Sofitel Brisbane
13.30 – 15.00
Meeting of the Steering Committee (Members only)
    1. Election of the Standing Committee Officers – Working Paper in ArabicEnglishFrenchRussian and Spanish
    2. Topic of the Technical Seminar for 2020 – Working Paper in ArabicEnglishFrenchRussian and Spanish
    3. ICAC Accounting System – Working Paper in ArabicEnglishFrenchRussian and Spanish
    4. Strategy Away Day – Working Paper in ArabicEnglishFrenchRussian and Spanish
    5. PSAP – Prior Year Recommendations– Working Paper in English
    6. Uncollected Assessments of  the ICAC Members
15.00 – 15.30
Refreshment Break
15.30 – 16.30
Closing Plenary Session
Chair:  Ms Maha Zakaria, Chair ad interim Standing Committee, Egypt
    • Reading of the Plenary Meeting Final Statement (English    Arabic    French    Russian    Spanish)
    • Invitation from Europe (Spain), Host of the 79th Plenary Meeting
    • Closing Comments by the Host of the 76th Plenary Meeting (Uzbekistan) on behalf of all Delegates
    • Closing comments by Chair of the Organising Committee of Australia – Dr Alison McMorrow, Assistant Secretary, Agricultural Policy Division, Department of Agriculture, Australia
    • Closing Remarks by the Chair
Friday 6 December
06:45
Board coach for Technical Tour
It is important you are in the Sofitel Brisbane Central lobby on time
07:00
Technical Tour coach leaves Sofitel Brisbane Central for the Darling Downs for a full day tour
Dinner and overnight stay are included
Saturday 7 December
16:00
Technical Tour coach arrives back at Sofitel Brisbane Central
DRAFT Agenda for Technical Tour
Visit to an integrated irrigated cotton farm and cattle feedlot
Visit to a rain-fed cotton farm
Visit to plant breeding facilities and field sites
Presentations from plant breeders, entomologists and irrigation researchers

Dr. Khalid Mahmood is the Co-Founder of SAWiE, where he has been instrumental in developing digital farm advisory and farm data platforms supporting over 10,000 farmers in Pakistan, improving traceability and transparency across agricultural supply chains. He is leading the development of first-mile traceability systems and the TRUE Cotton platform, connecting farmers with sustainable global textile supply chains.

He also serves as Head of Partnerships at the British Society of Soil Science (BSSS), where he leads strategic collaborations to position soil health as a critical climate mitigation solution, linking soil management with carbon sequestration, water quality, air quality, and biodiversity restoration.

Trained as an Agricultural Economist (PhD, University of Göttingen, Germany), Dr. Mahmood combines strong scientific expertise with practical innovation to address global challenges in food security, ESG reporting, climate resilience, and sustainable agriculture.

His past work includes leadership in research programs on carbon reduction in rice and livestock systems, and collaboration with leading institutions such as Rothamsted Research, AHDB UK, and the Thünen Institute (Germany).

Dr. Mahmood is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (UK) and has contributed to international research and knowledge networks including IFCN and UPSIGN.

Recognized among the Net Zero 50 Leaders, he continues to advance international partnerships that place soil at the centre of regenerative agriculture, natural capital development, and ecosystem restoration.

 

Dr Olivier Zieschank studied Management at the university of Lausanne, where he graduated in 2005. Until 2010, he worked in a Swiss-based start-up that specialized in negotiating cell tower lease agreements, where he became associate director. In 2010, he returned to university and studied applied economics in Neuchatel, Switzerland. He wrote his PhD in Economics at the University of Freiberg, Germany, where he developed a theory of organization. Mr Zieschank was appointed Economist at the ITMF in August 2017 and became director in January 2021.

Ashwin Chandran holds a Bachelors Degree in Textile Technology from UMIST, UK and a Masters degree in Business Administration from the University of Illinois, USA.

He is currently the Chairman of the Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI) and it’s subsidiary - Cotton Development and Research Association – CITI CDRA. CITI-CDRA works with Indian cotton farmers and collaborates with government bodies and research institutions to improve cotton productivity, promote farmer welfare and expand the knowledge of Indian cotton farmers on the subjects of sustainability, traceability and meeting compliance and certification requirements.

He is the Chairman & Managing Director of Precot Limited, a manufacturer of yarns, threads and cotton based non-woven hygiene products.

He is the Chairman of the Indian Textile Sector Skill Council, a member of the Council of Administration of The Cotton Textiles Export Promotion Council (TEXPROCIL) and is a past Chairman of the Southern India Mills Association (SIMA).

Mr. Shreyans Gupta is an officer of the Indian Revenue Service (IRS), currently serving as First Secretary at the Embassy of India in Washington D.C. In his current role, he oversees critical portfolios within the Income-tax Overseas Unit (ITOU) and the Commerce Wing, facilitating bilateral and multilateral cooperation.

Throughout his career, Mr. Gupta has held diverse positions involving both the implementation and policy-making aspects of Indian taxation. His expertise spans complex tax audits, financial and criminal investigations, International Taxation and administration of core IT platforms/infrastructure. He has also served as a delegate of India to various international tax organizations, contributing to high-level discourse on global tax cooperation frameworks

Eric Trachtenberg is the Executive Director of the International Cotton Advisory Committee (ICAC).

Before coming to ICAC, he oversaw more than $700 million in programs to improve food security, support agricultural transformation, and strengthen land productivity at the U.S. Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC).

His earlier background includes service with USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) in the Russian Federation, China, and Taiwan where he resolved agricultural market access issues totaling more than $1.3 billion, designed and led investment facilitation initiatives that generated more than $10 billion in new activity, and oversaw export development programs worth $10 million.

He has a Masters in Agricultural Economics from Michigan State University, a Masters in Public Administration from the University of Southern California, and Bachelors degrees in Government and Economics from Cornell University.

Pia Terasa joined the textile machinery manufacturer Saurer over 25 years ago. She is responsible for marketing and communications at the group level. Coming originally from a non-textile background, market intelligence and business development have played major roles throughout her career. Her current main “hobby” is closely monitoring development of the textile recycling industry and circular economy.

Dr. Md. Fakhre Alam Ibne Tabib is the former Executive Director of the Cotton Development Board of Bangladesh, with over 32 years of experience in cotton production, research, and development. He has demonstrated strong leadership and communication skills in engaging with national and international stakeholders in the cotton sector.

His expertise spans Integrated Pest Management (IPM), Integrated Crop Management (ICM), and Good Agricultural Practices (GAP) with a focus on sustainable, regenerative, and organic cotton production. His research interests include high-density planting systems, planting geometry, intercropping, and innovative cropping patterns. Dr. Tabib is also proficient in ICT applications, project planning and monitoring, and scientific report writing.

Dr. Tabib has played a significant leadership role within the International Cotton Advisory Committee (ICAC), serving as Vice-Chair (2023–2024) and Chair (2024–2025) of its Standing Committee. The ICAC is an association of governments of cotton-producing, consuming, and trading countries, recognized by the United Nations as the international commodity body for cotton and related products.

In addition, he serves as Vice President of the Ecological Society of Bangladesh and contributes actively to the executive bodies of other social and scientific organizations. He earned his Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Cotton Cropping Systems in 2013.

Dr. Tabib has participated in numerous international programs, conferences, and study visits related to cotton across countries including the USA, Türkiye, Uzbekistan, India, Egypt, the Philippines, South Korea, and Malaysia. He has published 12 scientific papers and several articles on cotton in reputed national and international journals and magazines. He is also an active member of multiple professional associations and networks worldwide.

Dr. Elsie Sia Kanza is the current Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United Republic of Tanzania to the United States of America and Mexico. Prior to that role, Ambassador Kanza served as Special Advisor to the President of the World Economic Forum, and, before that, Head of Africa and Member of Executive Committee for 10 years championing growth and development in Africa leveraging public private collaboration. In 2015, She was awarded a Doctorate in Business Administration (honoris causa) by the University of Strathclyde for the transformative impact achieved in Africa.

Ambassador Kanza also served in the government for a decade and a half as economic advisor to the President of the United Republic of Tanzania, as well as in various capacities with the Ministry of Finance and Central Bank of Tanzania.

In 2008, Ambassador Kanza became an Archbishop Tutu Leadership Fellow, and in 2011 a WEF Young Global Leader. She was also nominated as a Richard von Weizsacker Fellow and highlighted as one of Africa’s 50 most powerful women by Forbes in 2020. Additionally, she has served on various boards, including those of the African Leadership Institute - South Africa, Mercy Corps Europe, The Nature Conservancy Africa Council, and the Uongozi Institute.

Ambassador Kanza obtained a Bachelor’s degree from the United States International University – Africa in Business Administration and later graduated with a Master's degree in finance from the University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom and an MA in Development Economics, Center for Development Economics, Williams College, USA.

Alison Ward has over 30 years of international experience in sustainability and corporate affairs. Alison is the CEO of CottonConnect, where she leads a team of over 100 employees, impacting the lives of over 800,000 cotton farmers in India, China, Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt and Bangladesh.  Under Alison’s leadership the organization: drives supply chain transparency connecting sustainable fibres from farm to store; focuses on the rights and skills of women in supply chains through pioneering gender programmes; and continues to develop innovations at a farm level. She leads cotton strategies and programmes for global brands and retailers.

Previously Alison worked with Mondelez International and Kraft Foods and was the Global Head of Corporate Responsibility at Cadbury.

With a mission to drive scalable change, Alison served as a Member of the Sustainable Cotton Steering Committee for Textile Exchange.  She sat on the Sustainability Advisory Committee for the London Olympic Games and has been a Coach and Mentor to commercial teams at WWF and the Ethical Trade Initiative. Alison is also a Life fellow of the RSA- Royal Society of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce.

Alison has completed the Senior Executive Programme at Ashridge Business School and the Business & Sustainability Programme at the Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership. She holds a BA Hons in English from the University of Birmingham.

 

 

With more than 43 years of experience in textiles and fibre processing, Marinus has extensive commercial knowledge of all facets of the cotton production pipeline from field to fabric, specialising in yarn manufacturing and quality. Amongst others, he is a certified quality expert and is the current chair of ICAC’s Task Force for the Commercial Standardisation of Instrument Testing of Cotton. He is also an executive member of the Australian Cotton Ginners Association and the ITMF International Committee on Cotton Testing Methods. Marinus is also a member of the ITMF Spinners Committee and the Cotton Classing Association of Australia, and is the Australian fibre quality technical expert.
He has authored many articles and technical reports and has been invited to present at numerous domestic and international conferences. He has managed to secure a large and diverse number of projects, service agreements, and commission cotton textile processing work. He has won many awards, including the prestigious Australian Cotton Researcher of the Year Award.

Navdeep Singh Sodhi began his career at India’s largest cotton-textile company and has 35+ years of international experience in mill operations and management consulting. His expertise includes strategic policy, technology and international trade and investment. With experience in over 50 countries, he advises an international clientele and has conducted multiple international studies on the cotton-textile value chain. These include the global benchmarking study to evaluate the competitiveness of India’s textile industry for the Cotton Textile Export Promotion Council (TEXPROCIL). He contributed to the formulation of the perspective plan for the Indian textile engineering industry (TEI). Mr Sodhi has been supporting the campaign for transformation of cotton in C-4 Countries + Côte d’Ivoire in West Africa and led the flagship study in West Africa commissioned by IFC (World Bank Group) that was recently presented at the World Cotton Day 2023 commemorated under the auspices of UNIDO in Vienna. Mr Sodhi is a partner with Gherzi Textil Organisation, Switzerland, and a Chartered Fellow (C.Text FTI) of the Textile Institute in Manchester, England.

Experienced professional with over 42 years of expertise in textile plant management, business establishment, plant turnaround, managing turnkey projects and overseeing large textile operations across three continents. Successfully initiated new factories in Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and North America. Has been business head responsible for P&L of large textile operation in Canada and USA.

Holds a Bachelor’s degree in Textile Technology from PSG College of Technology, India.

Key areas of expertise include:

  • Turnkey project management
  • Turnaround of large textile plants in diverse geographical locations
  • Establishment and management of businesses in various regions
  • Strategic, financial, and marketing planning and execution for textile plants
  • Product development
  • Customer relationship management

Name: Mary Concilia Anchang
Company: Onambele Anchang & Associates
Country: Cameroon
Position: Managing Partner
Website: www.oaalawfirm.com

Executive Chair

The African Chamber of Trade and Commerce ACC

Email: oaalawpartners2@gmail.com, africanchambernetwork@gmail.com

Websites www.africanchamber-abo.org  www.ficota.org

Called to the Cameroon Bar in 1993, Barrister Mary Concilia Anchang epse Onambele, is the managing partner at Onambele Anchang & Associates (OAALAW). She demonstrates consistency and dedication in 32 years of National and international legal work and advocacy. Renown for her legal prowess, her ability to delve into unconventional and controversial topics, has earned her access to several platforms at all levels, in the society. In her persuasive urge to address stubborn societal problems in the continent, she has created several tools to express her opinion and drive policy in a wide range of business sectors. She addresses legal, social and economic problems, with the perspective to contribute in crafting novel schemes, policies and practices to oblige relevance and impact for the welfare and livelihood of communities.

Her law practice, a full-service corporate law firm, serves a broad range of businesses in various industry sectors. Client satisfaction is pivotal at OAALA. Her firm is one of the most sought-after contemporary lawyers in the continent of Africa. Passionate, engaging and focus driven, her peers revere her resolve to address challenging matters in a friendly and dialogue mode. Her brilliance, and keen eye for detail earns great recognition from her clients.

She is the pioneer African IP lawyer, accredited with the African organization of Intellectual & Industrial property (OAPI) with jurisdiction in 17 countries since 1994.

In 1998, curious and concerned about Africa`s significant dependence on foreign intellectual property assets and imports of goods and services into the continent, she founded; “The Foundation for the Promotion of Inventions, Innovations, and Artistic Designs” (FPI) to promote research and development for African discoveries, talents, traditional Knowledge and know-how for validation of discoveries for local use and exports to global markets.

Retained in 1998, to advise the Cameroon Association of Inventors and Innovators, she represented a medicinal cure for hepatitis, known under the trademark ''HEPASOR,” at d the International Exhibition Fair (INPEX) in 1999 in Pittsburgh, where FPI met with Dr. Nakammatz, the renown Japanese inventor of Viagra.

Then followed, the BBC Tomorrow’s World London Exhibition Fair in 1999, where FPI received an award from Mr. John Trevors, the renowned British inventor of the “Touch lamp” for her exhibitions.

From 2001 -2006, she accompanied one of Africa`s most revolutionary, controversial and nonconventional research initiatives in HIV /AIDS for therapeutic vaccines. This discovery, led by one of Africa`s most renown Professors, a Surgeon and international award price winner for research in the treatment of retrovirus for Burkitt’s Cancer, Sickle cell and HIV /AIDS. At a time when HIV/AIDs was ravaging lives in the Continent of Africa, she played a very compelling advocacy role at all fronts, while advising on the patentability, design and trademark ownership of the Vaccine process across the globe.

As Cofounder of the Cameroon National Committee of the International Chamber of Trade & Commerce (ICC Cameroon) in 2021, she stunned the continent, in 2006, with her nomination by the World Business Council, of The International Chamber of Trade & Commerce (ICC) Paris, as the pioneer, African, female country, court member, at the ICC International Court of Arbitration, since its creation in 2023. A mandate she held 4 years..

From 2004 -2014, as a member of the ICC Paris Intellectual property (IP) and the Arbitration commissions, she contributed with experts from governments, Civil society, multinationals, intra governmental organizations, institutions and businesses, through successive annual COP Conferences, to address policy reviews on the global climate change Agenda, that lead to the signing of, the Paris convention in 2015 on climate change.

Coupled with her legal practice, she founded & Chairs “The African Chamber of Trade & Commerce” (ACC), a non-profit and non-governmental, private sector chamber, aimed at using Public, Private Partnerships (PPPs) as a strategic tool to build sustainable and resilient infrastructures. The aim is to avoid duplication and stagnation for gainful entrepreneurial business practices.

Focal on the ACC agenda, is her advocacy for Tripartite Partnerships, that would engage expertise in, North/South, South/South and North/North business ventures. This should invariably contribute towards impactful and traceable development in local African communities. Through this initiative, she pledges to bring her expertise and knowledge into a project, she is deeply passionate about, and believes could shift paradigms in the  continent.. That is; “Institutional Advocacy for 'Africa's Socio-Economic Development."

Convinced of the need to promote IP asset ownership in Africa for improved wealth for entrepreneurial self-reliant opportunities, she believes validating African inventions and innovations, would pave the way for IP ownership and knowledge transfer for capital markets.

She has since 2018 created “The International Forum for cotton, textiles, accessories & Fashion (FICOTA) to address the African Cotton value chain and supply chains, as pivotal for talents to create wealth and job opportunities in Africa.

In prelude to the 4th edition of FICOTA, coming up in November 2026, in Cairo, Egypt, she will be Speaking at the ICAC 83rd plenary conference coming up in Tanzania in November 2025, on the role of National policies for African textiles.

Transforming Cotton into Textile and things in Africa is a vision, FICOTA promotes for optimization and industrialization of African cotton and Textiles. The game changer for. (www.africanchamber-abo.org) FICOTA is created to facilitate sustainability and optimization in the African cotton value and supply chains from “Seed to Fashion” or from “Farm to Market” through value addition. (www.ficota.org ) The focus is on adapting ecosystems for Africa`s industrialization in the textiles industry.

The plurality, multi-culturalism and multidimensionality of ACC, provides a structure with the unique capacity for institutions and stakeholders to create adaptive business models, based on sector needs of partners. The purpose is to facilitate harmonious growth with efficient ecosystems, to implement attainable goals, through value addition, in local value and supply chains.

Accolades and Publications:

2016, OAALAW won the “AI African Award of Excellence.

2018, Recognized amongst 100 of the finest professional Women in a book titled “Women Pioneer In Dispute Resolutions” by Arbitral Women.

2019 Published an article on IP Funding: A Key to Entrepreneurial Development Through IP Asset Ownership in Africa in the London based “Women's IP Magazine

2020/21, Profiled in the Magazine “Rising Women”.

2023, Appointed Member of the International Cotton Advisory Committee/Private Sector Advisory Committee (PSAC)

2023, she was nominated as Executive member of the African Private Sector Summit. (APSS)

2024 she organized the 3rd Edition of the International Forum for Cotton, Textiles, Accessories & Fashion (FICOTA) in the sea site Ocean city, of Kribi, Cameroon.

2025, she published an article on “The Mystery, Power, Purpose and Ownership of Talent & Knowledge” in the London based “Women's IP Magazine”

She was nominated and ranked as the No. 6 in the Policy and Advocacy category for the Top 100 Influential Women Leaders in IP Law.

She is a current member of several association International Trademark Association (INTA), American Bar Association, Arbitral Women, Association of OAPI IP Agents, (AMOAPI), Foundation for the Promotion of Inventors ,Innovators  (FPI), Maman Eucharist du Mont Febe (MEMO) African Private Summit (APPSS), Africa US international Chamber of Commerce and Industry (AfUSA)  ACC and other

She enjoys travelling, music, sports, praying, and supporting charities.

 

Besim Özek

Strategy & Business Development Director

Following his graduation from Tarsus American College and Cukurova University Mechanical Engineering, he has taken a large and vital business role in Logistics and Purchasing Departments for over 20 years.

He is now Strategy and Business Development  Director in BOSSA which is one of the largest Denim Producers is Turkey. He has been very involved in Sustainable Textile Production.

He had been active presenting the company in;

  • Turkish Exporters Assembly, ITHIB (Member of Board)
  • Turkish Cotton Textile Manufacturer ‘s Union (Member of Board)
  • Turkish National Cotton Council (Member of Board)
  • The Union of Chambers and Commodity, Turkish Textile Industry Assembly

Twitter Besim Ozek:      @besimozek

Linkedin Besim Ozek:    besim-ozek

SIDDHARTHA RAJAGOPAL, Executive Director – TEXPROCIL

Dr. Siddhartha Rajagopal is the Executive Director of the Cotton Textiles Export Promotion Council (TEXPROCIL). He holds a PhD in Management Studies and has nearly four decades of experience in international trade in textiles and clothing.

Over his career, he has worked across the entire textile value chain—from fibre to fashion—and has been part of several Government of India delegations and negotiating groups, including bilateral engagements with the USA, the European Union, and consultations at the WTO.

Dr. Rajagopal has played a key role in developing export promotion schemes, market development strategies, and organizing India’s participation in international textile exhibitions and trade delegations. He is currently involved in the implementation of the “Kasturi Cotton India” project in collaboration with the Cotton Corporation of India and the Ministry of Textiles.

Padmini Singla, Joint Secretary, Ministry of Textiles, Government of India

Padmini Singla is a career civil servant from India with over two decades of leadership roles in public administration. Currently serving as the Joint Secretary in the Ministry of Textiles, she spearheads the strategic development and policy framework for Natural Fibres, including Cotton.

An alumna of Delhi School of Economics, she holds an Executive Master’s from EPFL, Switzerland.