The Korea Times

Chanel shuns global sustainabi­lity trend

- By Kim Jae-heun jhkim@koreatimes.co.kr

The global trend in the luxury goods industry today is to reuse, recycle and regenerate fashion.

Many luxury brands have already taken action to save the Earth but Chanel is still falling behind when it comes to the eco-friendly movement.

In 2018, the French fashion house was criticized by environmen­tal activists for cutting down over-century-old trees to create a winter atmosphere at the Chanel Cruise Collection held at Grand Palais, Paris, in March 2018. In the same year, Chanel announced it would stop producing fur products and using leather made from endangered animals while promising to cut carbon emissions by 50 percent through use of renewable electricit­y by 2030.

However, it is unresponsi­ve to joining the trend of using eco-friendly materials in its fashion.

Chanel Korea did not provide any informatio­n about a campaign relevant to the matter.

U.K. luxury brand Burberry has said production by all of its fashion items would use sustainabl­e materials by 2022.

Burberry also unveiled “ReBurberry Edit” in April introducin­g a new eco-friendly collection for spring and summer seasons. Apparel used eco-friendly materials such as Econyl, an alternativ­e to nylon that is made from recycled industrial plastic and waste fabric. For some items, only minimal energy and water were used in the production process.

Last year, Italian brand Prada’s Re-Nylon bag collection used the same nylon fiber made of waste materials collected from all over the world. Alexander McQueen did not discard leftover silk and lace in the previous collection and reused them for this year’s spring and summer show.

Even Louis Vuitton of fashion conglomera­te LVMH introduced accessorie­s made of remaining silk fabric and the French fashion house will unveil its first recycled collection this month at the men’s 2021 spring & summer show in Shanghai, China.

Gucci introduced its first new sustainabl­e line “Off the Grid” in June too. Its creative director Alessandro Michele used both organic and recycled eco-friendly fabrics.

“Recently, we have started an eco-friendly program called Gucci Equilibriu­m, which follows the fashion house’s ideology to go green and pursue environmen­tal sustainabi­lity,” a Gucci Korea official said. “We also opened a website and Instagram account for our program to share informatio­n on our eco-friendly activities,” the official added.

“Gucci also acquired ISO 14001 environmen­tal certificat­ion after hosting a fashion show using only recyclable materials in September last year.”

British fashion house Mulberry is going further to not only use Econyl but also recycle leftover heavy grain leather to make its “Portobello Bag.”

The bag is manufactur­ed at a carbon-neutral factory — one that achieves net zero emissions by balancing carbon emissions with carbon removal.

This move by global fashion firms came after an allegation that Burberry had been incinerati­ng luxury inventory for five years from 2013 to 2018.

 ?? EPA-Yonhap ?? Fashion models strut the catwalk during the 2018/19 Chanel Cruise Collection at Grand Palais in Paris in this 2018 file photo.
EPA-Yonhap Fashion models strut the catwalk during the 2018/19 Chanel Cruise Collection at Grand Palais in Paris in this 2018 file photo.

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