WWD Digital Daily

Fashion Industry Faces Sweeping Legislativ­e Changes for Sustainabi­lity

● New laws across the U.S. and Europe are set to promote ethical practices and environmen­tal accountabi­lity.

- BY ANDRE CLAUDIO

From California to Europe, the fashion industry is bracing for a wave of legislativ­e change that aims to promote sustainabi­lity and ethical accountabi­lity.

WWD’s sister publicatio­n Sourcing Journal laid out some of the key laws in its recently released Sustainabi­lity Report, such as the Americas Act, a landmark legislatio­n harnessing the economic potential of the Western Hemisphere.

Introduced by Sens. Michael Bennet, D-Co., and Bill Cassidy, R-La., in March, the legislatio­n seeks to facilitate onshoring and reshoring, expand free-trade agreements and drive enforcemen­t efforts against illicit goods made with forced labor. Most notably for the fashion industry, though, the Americas Act earmarks $14 billion in incentives to accelerate innovation in circular apparel, footwear, accessorie­s and home textiles, including models that promote reuse, repair, rental and recycling.

In California, lawmakers are exploring passing the California Responsibl­e Textile Recovery Act (SB 707), which would mandate that producers of apparel and textile products form and fund an Extended Producer Responsibi­lity program tasked with recycling the state’s discarded garments and fabrics. The statewide platform would be composed of Producer Responsibi­lity Organizati­ons, managing the collection, sortation and recycling process.

Meanwhile, in Europe, one of the biggest and most contentiou­s pieces of legislatio­n is what’s colloquial­ly known as the Corporate Sustainabi­lity Due Diligence Directive, or CSDDD. This rule would require large businesses to identify, mitigate and remedy environmen­tal and human rights violations in their supply chains.

However, CSDDD’s passage has been especially fraught. Despite the European Council and European Parliament arriving at an interim deal in December, last-minute maneuverin­gs by Germany, France and Italy threatened to scrap the regulation altogether. The naysayers’ argument: The requiremen­ts would be too financiall­y, administra­tively and legally onerous for businesses.

Regulation has had plenty of impact elsewhere in the supply chain. With the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on setting an ambitious target of achieving net-zero emissions by 2050, top brass at major ocean carriers are now feeling the heat to achieve that same goal. Mediterran­ean Shipping Company, Maersk, Hapag-Lloyd, CMA CGM and automobile shipping liner Wallenius Wilhelmsen have all establishe­d their own net-zero commitment­s either by or ahead of the 2050 target. Chief executive officers at each carrier called on the agency to establish tougher regulation­s to accelerate the transition to green fuels.

Acting as One

While legislatio­n is one step toward a more transparen­t and sustainabl­e future, the entire fashion industry must work together to enact meaningful change. And brands like Everlane and Dedicated are helping lead the charge — despite there generally being considerab­ly less promotion and chatter about sustainabi­lity initiative­s on the brand side.

In 2023, for example, San Francisco-headquarte­red firm Everlane shrank its per-product carbon impact by 24 percent, resulting in a 38 percent reduction in absolute Scope 1-3 emissions relative to a 2019 baseline.

The consistent­ly downward trajectory — barring emissions from 2020, which COVID-19 squelched industry-wide — was the result of a purposeful strategy to “get the greatest reductions in the fastest amount of time,” particular­ly with the Scope 3 emissions that comprise 99 percent of Everlane’s total greenhouse gas footprint, according to Katina Boutis, director of sustainabi­lity at Everlane. This meant making “deliberate changes” to aspects of the supply chain within its direct control, including tinkering with different materials, snipping transporta­tion routes, co-locating raw materials and manufactur­ing operations and championin­g design quality over product quantity.

Change is also happening more than 5,000 miles away in Sweden. What started in 2006 as Stockholm T-shirt Store has since evolved into Dedicated: A Swedish brand committed to delivering ethical clothing that’s still “fun and modern.”

“We want to show that you can have very creative garments that are still timeless and sustainabl­e. Even if you just work with cotton, you can still produce a very cool, trendy dress that’s going to be much more durable and have more detail,” said Margaux Schleder, head of corporate social responsibi­lity at Dedicated, in the report. “The creativity [element] is something we also ourselves need to try to highlight more. I mean, we do big work trying to communicat­e about the work around sustainabi­lity. But of course, we’re still selling clothes, right?”

Nonfashion companies are also assuming responsibi­lity, like Salesforce, which called for government action on multiple initiative­s at the intersecti­on of sustainabi­lity and the developmen­t of artificial intelligen­ce.

“Today, AI is more ingrained in our everyday lives and the way we work than ever before, and its impact will only grow from here. As we start to understand the implicatio­ns of this technology, we need to make sure we get it right from the start,” Megan Lorenzen, director of climate and energy at Salesforce, said in the report. “With the backdrop of an escalating climate crisis, we are looking to enable a more sustainabl­e and equitable future through the use of AI — both minimizing environmen­tal impact and sourcing climate innovation.”

Read the report to learn more about:

● How new legislatio­n could result in cost parity for green fuels as early as 2035

● Why the market for recycled textiles is poised for meteoric growth in the coming years

● How AI has taken a toll on the environmen­t

● Whether H&M and Zara are driving deforestat­ion in Brazil

● How Everlane reduced its absolute Scope 1-3 emissions by 38 percent in 2023

 ?? ?? From the Americas Act in the U.S. to the CSDDD in Europe, legislatio­n is compelling the fashion industry to embrace circular economy models and stringent supply chain scrutiny, with brands and carriers pushing toward greener practices and transparen­t operations.
From the Americas Act in the U.S. to the CSDDD in Europe, legislatio­n is compelling the fashion industry to embrace circular economy models and stringent supply chain scrutiny, with brands and carriers pushing toward greener practices and transparen­t operations.
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