What Is Alxa Cashmere? The Story Behind the World's Finest Desert Fiber
There is a place in northern China where summer temperatures reach 40°C and winter nights plunge below -40°C. Where sand dunes stretch to the horizon and the wind strips moisture from everything it touches. Where rainfall averages less than 200 millimeters per year and the landscape looks, from a distance, like it could not possibly sustain life.
This is the Alxa region of Inner Mongolia — and it produces the finest cashmere fiber on Earth.
That paradox is not a coincidence. It is the entire point. The extreme climate that makes Alxa one of the harshest inhabited environments in Asia is precisely what forces the white cashmere goats of this region to grow an undercoat of extraordinary fineness and density. What we call luxury is, for the goat, a matter of survival.
Understanding where Alxa cashmere comes from — the land, the animal, the people, the process — changes how you think about the fiber entirely. This is not a commodity. It is a biological response to one of the most unforgiving environments on the planet, harvested by hand, once a year, from animals that yield barely enough for a single scarf.
Where Is Alxa? Geography of an Extreme Landscape
The Alxa League (also romanized as Alashan) occupies the westernmost portion of Inner Mongolia, an autonomous region in northern China. It borders Mongolia to the north and the Gansu and Ningxia provinces to the south and east. The region encompasses roughly 270,000 square kilometers — an area larger than the United Kingdom — yet its population is under 250,000 people. Most of that land is desert.
Three deserts converge here: the Badain Jaran, the Tengger, and the Ulan Buh. Together, they form part of the broader Gobi Desert system that stretches across southern Mongolia and northern China. The Badain Jaran alone contains some of the tallest stationary sand dunes in the world, reaching over 500 meters in height.
The climate is classified as extreme continental. That means there is no ocean anywhere nearby to moderate temperature swings. Winters bring sustained periods of -30°C, with cold snaps dipping to -40°C and beyond. Summers push past 35°C regularly and can exceed 40°C. The annual temperature range — the difference between the coldest winter night and the hottest summer day — can exceed 80 degrees Celsius. Few inhabited places on Earth experience a wider swing.
Precipitation is scarce. Most of the Alxa region receives 50 to 200 millimeters of rain per year, virtually all of it falling in brief summer storms. Humidity is extremely low year-round. The wind is persistent, often carrying fine sand that scours exposed surfaces.
This is not a place that invites softness. And yet it is exactly where softness is born.
The Alxa White Cashmere Goat: A Breed Shaped by Survival
The Alxa white cashmere goat is not a generic goat that happens to live in the desert. It is a distinct breed — recognized by Chinese agricultural authorities and studied by fiber scientists — that has adapted over centuries to the specific pressures of this environment.
Like all cashmere goats, the Alxa white has a dual-coat system. The outer layer consists of coarse guard hairs — long, straight, relatively thick fibers that shed rain, block wind, and protect against physical abrasion from sand and rock. Beneath this outer coat lies the down — a dense mat of ultra-fine, crimped fibers that trap air against the skin and provide thermal insulation.
It is this inner down that we call cashmere.
What makes the Alxa white goat's down exceptional is its fineness. Laboratory measurements consistently place Alxa cashmere at 14.5 to 15.5 microns in diameter — at the very finest end of the global cashmere spectrum. For reference, a human hair is roughly 70 microns. Alxa cashmere fiber is approximately one-fifth the diameter of the hair on your head.
The breed also produces notably white fiber. While cashmere goats in other regions produce brown, gray, or mixed-color down that requires bleaching or dyeing to achieve light colors, the Alxa white goat's down is naturally white or cream. This is significant because bleaching damages fiber structure, reducing softness and increasing brittleness. Naturally white cashmere can be dyed to any shade without the intermediate chemical processing that degrades fiber quality.
The goats themselves are medium-sized, hardy, and remarkably adapted to their environment. They graze on sparse desert vegetation — shrubs, grasses, and hardy plants that would not sustain most domestic animals. Herders move their flocks across vast grazing territories, following traditional seasonal patterns that allow vegetation to regenerate.
Why Extreme Cold Produces Finer Cashmere
The relationship between climate severity and cashmere fineness is not a marketing story. It is biology.
Cashmere down is the goat's primary thermal insulator. In warmer climates, a moderately fine down layer provides adequate insulation. The animal does not need to invest metabolic energy in producing an exceptionally dense or fine undercoat because the thermal demand is lower.
In the Alxa desert, the thermal demand is extreme. When ambient temperatures reach -40°C and wind speeds amplify the cold, the animal's survival depends on the efficiency of its insulating layer. Finer fibers trap more air per unit of weight — creating more thermal resistance with less material. Over generations, natural selection has favored Alxa goats that produce the finest, densest down, because those animals survived the harshest winters and passed on their genetics.
This is the same principle that makes goose down from Arctic and sub-Arctic regions more insulating per gram than goose down from temperate climates. Extreme cold is an evolutionary filter for insulation quality.
The result is fiber that is simultaneously ultra-fine (14.5 microns), relatively long-staple (36mm and above in premium selections), and naturally crimped — the three characteristics that define the highest-grade cashmere in the world. At VIONIS·XY, this origin is the foundation of the entire cashmere line — not as a sourcing preference, but as a non-negotiable quality requirement.
The Harvest: A 30-Minute Ritual Each Spring
Every spring, as temperatures rise and days lengthen, the Alxa white cashmere goat begins to shed its winter down. The dense undercoat that kept the animal alive through months of subzero cold is no longer needed and begins to loosen from the skin, separating naturally from the coarser outer guard hairs.
This is the harvest window — typically a few weeks in April and May — and it has not changed in centuries.
Herders collect the cashmere by hand-combing. Not shearing. The distinction matters enormously.
Shearing removes the entire coat at once — guard hair and down together — using electric clippers. It is fast and efficient but produces a mixed fiber harvest that requires extensive mechanical dehairing to separate the coarse guard hairs from the fine down. That mechanical process breaks fibers, reducing average staple length and damaging the crimp structure that gives cashmere its loft and softness.
Hand-combing is different. The herder uses a wide-toothed metal comb — a tool that has been essentially unchanged for generations — to gently pull the loosened down from beneath the guard hair layer. Because the down is already naturally detaching from the skin during the molting period, it releases with minimal resistance. The guard hairs, which are still firmly rooted, remain on the animal.
The result is a nearly pure down harvest with minimal guard hair contamination, preserving the full length and structural integrity of each fiber.
The process takes approximately 30 minutes per goat. A single animal yields 150 to 200 grams of usable cashmere fiber — roughly enough for one scarf, or about one-third of what is needed for a sweater. This scarcity is not artificial. It is the biological limit of what one animal can produce.
For the herders, this is both livelihood and tradition. The families who raise these goats have done so for generations, and the combing ritual is a skilled practice passed from parent to child. The herder knows each animal. The comb must follow the natural direction of fiber growth. Pressure must be firm enough to collect the down but gentle enough to avoid stressing the animal or pulling rooted fibers. It is manual work that resists mechanization — not because the technology does not exist, but because the technology cannot match the fiber quality that skilled hand-combing achieves.
From Raw Fiber to Luxury Garment
The raw cashmere that leaves the herder's hand is not yet the soft, clean fiber you feel in a finished garment. It is mixed with residual guard hairs, natural oils (lanolin), dust, sand, and vegetable matter. The transformation from raw harvest to finished textile involves several critical stages.
Sorting. Raw cashmere is first sorted by color and fineness. White fiber is separated from any off-color or stained material. Coarser batches are separated from finer ones. This initial sorting determines the quality grade of the final product and is still largely done by hand, by experienced graders who can assess fineness by touch.
Dehairing. Even hand-combed cashmere contains some residual guard hairs. Dehairing machines use a combination of mechanical combing and air separation to remove these coarser fibers without damaging the fine down. Modern dehairing equipment can reduce guard hair content to below 0.1% — a purity level that would have been impossible a generation ago.
Washing and scouring. The sorted, dehaired fiber is washed to remove lanolin, dirt, and sand. This is done in progressively cleaner water baths at carefully controlled temperatures — too hot and the cashmere begins to felt; too aggressive and the fibers are damaged. The clean fiber loses roughly 30 to 50% of its raw weight during this process, which is one reason processed cashmere fiber commands around $110 per kilogram even before spinning.
Spinning. Clean fiber is carded (aligned), drawn into thin rovings, and spun into yarn. The spinning process determines twist count, yarn weight, and ply structure — all of which affect the durability, drape, and pilling characteristics of the finished fabric. The craftsmanship at this stage is where raw material quality either fulfills its potential or is compromised.
Knitting and finishing. The yarn is knitted into garments, washed again, steamed, pressed, and inspected. Quality control at this stage checks for consistency of gauge, color uniformity, and surface finish.
Alxa vs. Other Cashmere Origins
Not all cashmere is equal, and not all origin claims are meaningful. Here is how Alxa compares to other major sources:
Outer Mongolia. Mongolia is the world's second-largest cashmere producer. Mongolian cashmere is generally excellent — the climate is harsh, and traditional herding practices are well-established. Fiber fineness typically ranges from 15 to 17 microns, slightly coarser on average than Alxa but still within the premium range. The primary difference is breed: Mongolian goats are genetically distinct from the Alxa white and produce a wider range of fiber colors, often requiring more processing.
Nepal and Afghanistan. These regions produce cashmere from Changthangi and related breeds, often at high altitude. Fiber fineness is variable — some Himalayan cashmere matches Alxa quality, but supply chains are less industrialized and quality consistency is harder to maintain. The geopolitical and logistical challenges in these regions also make traceability more difficult.
Iran. Iranian cashmere (from the Raeini goat and related breeds) is a smaller but notable source. Fiber fineness averages 17 to 19 microns — coarser than premium Chinese and Mongolian cashmere but often with good fiber length. Iranian cashmere is priced lower and is commonly used in mid-market products.
Other Chinese regions. China produces cashmere in several provinces beyond Inner Mongolia, including Qinghai, Xinjiang, and Gansu. Quality varies significantly. Not all Chinese cashmere is Alxa cashmere — the breed, climate, and herding practices of the Alxa region are specific to that geography. Broader "Chinese cashmere" labels do not carry the same quality assurance as origin-specific sourcing from Alxa.
The key takeaway: origin matters because it determines breed genetics, climate exposure, and fiber characteristics. Alxa's combination of extreme cold, the white cashmere goat breed, and established hand-combing tradition produces a consistently ultra-fine, long-staple, naturally white fiber that few other origins can match.
Why Alxa Cashmere Is Under Pressure
The global cashmere market reached $3.6 billion in 2025, growing at 4.3% annually. That rising demand intersects with environmental pressures that threaten the long-term viability of cashmere production in its traditional heartlands.
Climate change. The Alxa region, like much of Central and East Asia, is experiencing measurable warming. Milder winters reduce the thermal stress on goats, which — over generations — could select for less fine down. Shorter and less severe cold seasons may also reduce the density of the winter undercoat. Climate scientists studying the region have documented shifts in average winter temperatures that, while modest in absolute terms, are significant for a biological system calibrated over centuries to extreme cold.
Desertification and overgrazing. The cashmere boom of the 1990s and 2000s led to a dramatic expansion of goat herds across Inner Mongolia and the broader Gobi region. Cashmere goats, unlike sheep, pull vegetation up by the root when grazing, which accelerates erosion in fragile desert-edge ecosystems. Overgrazing contributed to measurable desertification in parts of the Alxa region, prompting Chinese authorities to implement grazing limits and herd-size caps.
Herder economics. Younger generations of herding families are increasingly drawn to urban employment. The labor-intensive, low-margin economics of cashmere herding — where a year's work per goat produces 150 to 200 grams of fiber — compete poorly with salaried urban jobs. The knowledge base of experienced herders, including combing technique and seasonal grazing management, is at risk as fewer young people enter the profession.
Sustainable cashmere is not just a marketing label. It reflects a real and urgent challenge: maintaining fiber quality and production volumes while preserving the grassland ecosystems and herding communities that make Alxa cashmere possible. Brands that invest in traceable supply chains, fair herder compensation, and ecosystem-conscious sourcing are addressing a genuine vulnerability in the industry — not performing corporate theater.
How to Verify Authentic Alxa Cashmere
Cashmere fraud is well-documented. Studies have found that a significant percentage of products labeled "100% cashmere" contain undisclosed blends of wool, yak hair, or synthetic fiber. Verifying authenticity requires looking beyond the label.
SGS or equivalent lab certification. SGS is the world's leading inspection and certification company. An SGS fiber analysis report confirms the actual composition of a textile — identifying the fiber type, measuring micron diameter, and detecting the presence of non-cashmere fibers. VIONIS·XY subjects every cashmere product to SGS testing, publishing the results as a verifiable claim rather than a marketing assertion. If a brand cannot provide third-party test results, their purity claims rest entirely on trust.
Origin traceability. Authentic Alxa cashmere should come with provenance information — not just "cashmere from China" but specific regional sourcing. Brands that can name their supply region, describe their herding partners, and explain their fiber selection process are operating with a level of transparency that blended or generic cashmere simply cannot support.
Price reality. At current raw cashmere prices of $130 to $220 per kilogram — and with each goat producing only 150 to 200 grams per year — the fiber cost alone for a cashmere garment is substantial. A cashmere sweater from a brand like VIONIS·XY, priced around $398 for a cardigan, reflects the true economics of premium Alxa-origin cashmere. Products priced dramatically below this range are either using lower-grade cashmere, blending with other fibers, or both.
The hand test. Authentic ultra-fine cashmere has a distinct tactile quality that is difficult to replicate with blends or lower-grade fiber. It feels warm immediately on contact — not cool like silk or synthetic — and has a soft, slightly dry hand rather than a slippery or waxy feel. The fabric should have visible loft, springing back gently when compressed. With experience, the hand alone can distinguish 15-micron cashmere from 18-micron cashmere, though lab testing remains the definitive method.
Frequently Asked Questions
What micron count qualifies as cashmere?
The international standard (defined by the Cashmere and Camel Hair Manufacturers Institute and adopted by most regulatory bodies) requires cashmere fiber to measure 19 microns or finer in average diameter. However, there is enormous quality variation within that range. Fiber at 19 microns feels noticeably different from fiber at 14.5 microns. Premium Alxa cashmere typically falls between 14.5 and 15.5 microns — well below the threshold and at the finest end of commercial production.
Why is Alxa cashmere more expensive than regular cashmere?
Several factors compound. The fiber is finer, which means raw material prices are higher. The hand-combing harvest is slower and more labor-intensive than mechanical shearing. The naturally white color eliminates the need for bleaching but commands a premium because it allows clean dyeing to any shade. The low yield per animal — 150 to 200 grams — means that many goats are needed for even modest production volumes. And the geographic constraints of the Alxa region limit the total supply available. These are structural cost factors, not artificial scarcity.
Is Alxa cashmere the same as Mongolian cashmere?
No. While Inner Mongolia (where Alxa is located) shares a cultural and geographic heritage with the independent nation of Mongolia, the Alxa white cashmere goat is a distinct breed from the goats raised in Outer Mongolia. The breeds have different genetic profiles, produce fiber with different average characteristics, and are raised under different herding systems. Both can produce excellent cashmere, but they are not interchangeable. Labeling matters — "Mongolian cashmere" and "Alxa cashmere" refer to different animals, different regions, and different fiber profiles.
How can I tell if my cashmere is actually from Alxa?
The honest answer is that you cannot determine geographic origin by touch or visual inspection alone. Fiber origin verification requires either supply chain documentation from the brand (traceability records linking the finished product to specific sourcing regions) or advanced laboratory analysis. The practical approach is to buy from brands that provide transparent origin information and back their claims with third-party certification such as SGS testing. If a brand claims Alxa origin but cannot provide supporting documentation, treat the claim with skepticism.
Does climate change threaten Alxa cashmere quality?
Yes, and this is a concern that fiber scientists and the cashmere industry are actively monitoring. Warmer average winter temperatures in the Alxa region could, over time, reduce the evolutionary pressure that drives ultra-fine down production. The effect would be gradual — cashmere goat genetics change over generations, not seasons — but the direction of the trend is concerning. Additionally, changing precipitation patterns and continued desertification pressure the grassland ecosystems that sustain the goat herds. Sustainable herding practices and herd-size management are the primary tools available to mitigate these risks, but they require ongoing investment and cooperation between herders, regional authorities, and the brands that depend on this fiber.

