Session 2
3rd June 2026 – 1.45 pm to 3.45 pm
Global Supply Chains Under Pressure:
Why the Region is Emerging as the Next Global Sourcing Hub
Session Positioning
This session is positioned as a transition from global uncertainty to regional opportunity, demonstrating how structural shocks in global supply chains are accelerating the rise of Thailand and the broader ASEAN & Asian region as preferred sourcing bases.
Narrative Logic
“The global system is under stress — ASEAN & the broader Asian Region offer a stable, scalable alternative.”
Core Narrative
Amid escalating geopolitical tensions, supply chain disruptions, trade fragmentation, and cost volatility, global sourcing strategies are undergoing a structural reset. This session explores how these pressures are driving brands and manufacturers to diversify, de-risk, and regionalize supply chains — and why Thailand, ASEAN, China, and South Asia together are increasingly positioned to shape the next generation of global sourcing ecosystems.
Discussion Structure
Part 1: Global Supply Chain Disruption & Structural Reset
- Geopolitical conflicts, trade wars, and sanctions reshaping sourcing flows
- Post-pandemic exposure of fragility in over-concentrated supply chains
- Inflation, energy costs, and financial volatility impacting sourcing decisions
- Shift from cost-driven → risk-adjusted sourcing strategies
Key Transition
Global buyers are not just diversifying — they are redefining where and how they anchor sourcing operations.
Part 2: The Strategic Shift – From Risk Mitigation to Hub Selection
- Rise of China+1, Asia+, and multi-country sourcing models
- Increasing demand for:
Strategic Reality
The future of sourcing will not revolve around a single manufacturing destination, but interconnected regional sourcing ecosystems.
Part 3: China’s Evolving Role in the New Sourcing Landscape
China’s Evolving Role in Global Apparel & Textile Sourcing
- From mass manufacturing to high-value innovation
- Smart manufacturing, automation, technical textiles, and advanced industrial ecosystems
- How China remains indispensable in the global textile and apparel supply chain
China + ASEAN: Building the Next Asian Supply Chain Hub
- Complementary manufacturing strengths across the region
- Opportunities for deeper collaboration between China, ASEAN, and South Asia
- Leveraging the RCEP framework to strengthen regional value chains and cross-border sourcing integration
China’s Role in the Future of Asian Sourcing Platforms
- Partnerships with regional manufacturing nations
- Building stronger buyer-supplier ecosystems across Asia
- Creating integrated sourcing solutions for global brands and retailers
Part 4: ASEAN’s Strategic Proposition
- Strength across textiles, apparel, technical textiles, and innovation
- Integrated regional value chain across ASEAN markets
- Infrastructure readiness:
- Compliance, sustainability, and export readiness aligned with global standards
Part 5: Thailand as the Neutral Global Sourcing Gateway
- Thailand as a trusted, non-aligned sourcing destination in a fragmented world
- Bangkok as a global meeting point for buyers, brands, and manufacturers
- Central location in Asia enabling:
- Strong connectivity for international stakeholders:
Part 6: South Asia’s Manufacturing Strength & Regional Collaboration
- The critical role of South Asian manufacturing nations such as Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka in the global textile and apparel supply chain
- South Asia’s strengths in apparel scale, textiles, yarns, value-added manufacturing, and sourcing competitiveness
- How ASEAN and South Asia can complement each other through multi-country sourcing and integrated regional supply chains
- Building a resilient “Asia Integrated Sourcing Ecosystem” combining ASEAN connectivity with South Asian manufacturing capacity
Key Strategic Narrative
“The future of sourcing will belong to interconnected Asian supply chains — where ASEAN, China, and South Asia collaborate to offer diversified, resilient, and scalable sourcing solutions.”
Part 7: From Disruption to Opportunity – Building the Next Sourcing Hub
- How Thailand can anchor a regional sourcing ecosystem
- Leveraging ASEAN integration and RCEP connectivity to offer multi-country sourcing solutions
- Creating a platform for cross-border collaboration and trade expansion
- Aligning public and private sector efforts to strengthen regional positioning
Key Discussion Questions
- Are global supply chain disruptions accelerating a permanent shift toward ASEAN and Asia?
- What makes a sourcing destination “trusted” in today’s geopolitical environment?
- Can Thailand serve as a neutral coordination hub for multi-country sourcing?
- How can ASEAN collectively strengthen its value proposition to global buyers?
- How can China, ASEAN, and South Asia create complementary sourcing ecosystems rather than competing models?
- What role can RCEP play in accelerating integrated Asian supply chains?
- How do buyers evaluate Thailand and the wider Asian region versus other emerging sourcing hubs?
- How do South Asian textile and apparel manufacturing nations fit into this landscape — compete or collaborate?
- What are the gaps Thailand must address to fully capitalize on this opportunity?
Key Outcome
From Risk Awareness to Strategic Positioning
Participants will gain:
- A clear understanding that global sourcing is being structurally redefined
- Insight into how risk mitigation is driving geographic realignment
- A deeper perspective on China’s evolving role in regional sourcing ecosystems
- A compelling articulation of Thailand’s role as the next global sourcing hub in Asia
- A strategic roadmap for leveraging ASEAN, RCEP, and regional collaboration to build integrated multi-country supply chains
Strategic Closing Narrative
“Bangkok at the Center. ASEAN as the Engine. China as a Strategic Connector. Asia as the Solution.”
Meet the speakers
Mr. Matthijs Crietee
Secretary General, IAF
Dr. Dirk Vantyghem
Director General, EURATEX
Mr. Jemmy Kartiwa
Chairman, ASEAN Federation of Textile Industries (AFTEX)
Mr. Chen Namchaisiri
Chairman, Thailand Manmade Fiber Association (TMFA)
Dr. Chanchai Sirikasemlert
Executive Director, Thailand Textile Institute (THTI)
Shri Lalit Thukral
Chairman, NAEC Export Promotion Council, India
Mr. Felix A. Fernando
Chairman of Joint Apparel Association Forum (JAAF), Sri Lanka
Mr. Yohan Lawrence
Secretary General, Joint Apparel Association Forum (JAAF), Sri Lanka
Ms. Lisa Ramershoven
Head of Partner & Member Engagement Sustainable Terms of Trade Initiative (STTI)
Mr. Chalumpon Lotharukpong
Chairman, Thai Garment Manufacturers Association (TGMA)
Mr. Chen Zhi Rong
Director, China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Textiles (CCCT), Beijing
Mr. Suthee Kositwongsakul
Secretary General of the National Federation of Thai Textile Industries (NFTTI)
Dr. Kai-Fang Cheng
Deputy Director, Industrial Service Department at the Taiwan Textile Research Institute (TTRI)
Ms. Chi Phan
VITAS, Technical Advisor on Sustainability & Circularity
Ms. Amanthi Perera
Head of Group Sustainable Business MAS Holdings Pvt Ltd., Sri Lanka
