Levi’s bets on Pakistan’s cotton belt to future-proof denim

Levi Strauss has opened a new front in its sustainability strategy with a three-year regenerative agriculture programme in Pakistan’s cotton belt, where water stress, degraded soil and climate volatility are reshaping one of the country’s most important farming sectors.

MULTAN (The Thursday Times) — Levi Strauss & Co. has launched a new regenerative agriculture programme in Pakistan’s cotton belt, betting that soil restoration, water efficiency and farmer resilience will help secure one of its most important raw material supply chains in an era of climate pressure.

The initiative, announced for the Jalalpur Pirwala area of Punjab’s Multan district, places one of the world’s best-known denim brands at the centre of Pakistan’s agricultural transition. Cotton remains vital to Pakistan’s rural economy and textile exports, but the sector has been strained by water shortages, degraded land, volatile weather and rising production costs.

For Levi Strauss, the move is both environmental and strategic. Pakistan is a major cotton-producing country and an important node in the global apparel supply chain. If cotton yields weaken or farming becomes less viable, the consequences ripple through mills, exporters and brands far beyond South Asia.

The project, known as the Levi’s Regenerative and Resilient Landscape Initiative, began earlier this year and is expected to run for three years. It is being implemented with WWF-Pakistan and supported by Laudes Foundation.

Its scope is ambitious: 10,000 hectares of farmland in the first phase, with goals that include improving water productivity, cutting reliance on synthetic fertilisers and pesticides, rebuilding soil organic matter and planting 100,000 trees by 2028.

The company has framed Pakistan as a priority location because of the environmental stresses already reshaping agriculture there. In recent years, farmers have confronted floods, drought cycles, shifting monsoon patterns and persistent irrigation pressures. In a country where agriculture underpins millions of livelihoods, those pressures carry national significance.

Rather than focus on individual farms alone, the programme uses what organisers describe as a landscape model. That means treating farmland, surrounding communities, biodiversity and water systems as linked rather than separate challenges. The concept reflects a broader shift in corporate sustainability thinking: fixing a supply chain increasingly requires fixing the ecosystem around it.

Early figures suggest the groundwork has begun quickly. Nearly 600 farmers have been engaged through outreach meetings, 20 field schools established, and more than 160 participants trained in soil health and water conservation. Baseline soil sampling has also started, a key step in measuring whether claims of regeneration translate into measurable improvement.

Pakistan’s textile industry will watch closely. The country has long sought to move from low-margin volume production toward higher-value, sustainability-led manufacturing. If international brands begin rewarding cleaner and more resilient cotton sourcing, local producers may gain a competitive edge.

For Levi Strauss, the timing is notable. Global fashion groups face mounting scrutiny over water use, chemical inputs and emissions embedded deep within supply chains. Cotton, though natural, is resource-intensive when poorly managed. Regenerative farming offers brands a way to answer critics while protecting future supply.

There is also a geopolitical undertone. As sourcing risks rise in multiple regions due to climate shocks and trade tensions, companies are increasingly investing directly in the resilience of producing countries rather than simply buying from them.

Success, however, will depend on whether farmers see clear economic gains. Sustainability projects often falter when environmental targets outpace household realities. Reduced input costs, steadier yields and better income security may matter more in the field than any corporate pledge.

If the programme works, Pakistan could emerge not only as a cotton supplier, but as a test case for how global brands reshape agriculture under climate stress. For a country whose cotton story has often been told through crisis, that would mark a meaningful turn.

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