Union Coal and Mines Minister G. Kishan Reddy stated that Prime Minister Narendra Modi will virtually inaugurate the PM MITRA Kakatiya Mega Textile Park from Hyderabad on May 10.
Sharing the update on microblogging platform X, the minister said the project is planned as an integrated textile hub intended to support manufacturing, employment, and exports.
The project has an estimated cost of Rs 1,695.54 crore. According to the minister, the park is expected to attract investments exceeding Rs 6,000 crore, with more than Rs 3,800 crore already grounded.
Located across 1,327 acres in Warangal, Telangana, the facility is among the largest textile parks in the country. It has been selected under the PM MITRA (Pradhan Mantri Mega Integrated Textile Region and Apparel) scheme as a brownfield project.
The park follows the government’s ‘5F’ vision — farm to fibre, fibre to factory, factory to fashion and fashion to foreign — aimed at strengthening the textile value chain.
The minister stated that around 62 per cent of the park area has already been allotted to anchor investors. Internal infrastructure, including roads, water supply, and street lighting, has been completed.
Key utility projects are also nearing completion, including a 232/132/33 KV power substation and a 220 KV transmission line. A 12 MLD water supply system is in advanced stages, while Phase I of a 5 MLD common effluent treatment plant (CETP) with zero liquid discharge is currently under trial run.
According to the minister, the project is expected to generate more than 24,400 jobs after full operationalisation, with approximately 2,000 jobs already created.
Earlier in March, the government finalised the establishment of PM MITRA Parks at seven locations across the country, including Virudhunagar in Tamil Nadu, Warangal in Telangana, Navsari in Gujarat, Kalaburagi in Karnataka, Dhar in Madhya Pradesh, Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh and Amravati in Maharashtra.
In the Union Budget for 2026–27, the government also announced a separate scheme for establishing mega textile parks under a ‘challenge mode’ framework.