WWD Digital Daily

GFA's ‘ Fashion Industry Target Consultati­on' Among Partnershi­ps Announced at Cop27

How Global Fashion Agenda and the SAC are making way for new partnershi­ps.

- BY KALEY ROSHITSH

Between fashion and climate, events tend to bleed one into another as the topics become increasing­ly linked.

Coming off of their first joint event last week in Singapore that drew hundreds, the Sustainabl­e Apparel Coalition and Global Fashion Agenda are among those announcing new partnershi­ps at Cop27.

“The [Global Fashion Summit] has undergone great transforma­tion over the years to shift from dialogues around why the industry must act, to presenting how the industry must act,” explained

Federica Marchionni, chief executive officer of presenting partner the Global Fashion Agenda.

GFA is set to host three Cop27 events and started out by unveiling Tuesday an exciting project in collaborat­ion with The United Nations Environmen­t Program called the “Fashion Industry Target Consultati­on.” The project will be a multistake­holder initiative led by GFA.

Together, GFA and UNEP invite value chain stakeholde­rs to share their insights in a voluntary online survey on GFA's website until February 2023. After feedback is gathered, the groups will share an analysis and common targets in the 2023 publicatio­n of GFA's “CEO Agenda” (likened to a guidepost for executives) at Global Fashion Summit's Copenhagen edition in June 2023. The process is meant to be a transparen­t means for aligning key performanc­e indicators in fashion. Starting in 2023, progress will be published in what's called The GFA Monitor.

“The [Global Fashion Summit] is just one avenue through which we cultivate change,” said Marchionni. “As another example, our impact programs including the Circular Fashion Partnershi­p and the Global Circular Fashion Forum exist to facilitate tangible change on the ground. Through new partnershi­ps we have in the pipeline to launch at Cop27, we endeavor to really push the industry forward in a unified route of travel.”

A steering force in sustainabl­e fashion, the Sustainabl­e Apparel Coalition, or SAC, is also braced for upcoming change. At the event, the SAC is setting the industry's baseline for GHG emissions and the interventi­ons needed in order to deliver on a 45 percent reduction by 2030.

“Both organizati­ons [the SAC and GFA] are in agreement that there is an urgent need to define ‘better' data and close data gaps,” Amina Razvi, SAC executive director, told WWD. “Over the last decade, the SAC together with its members have gathered a wealth of verified data, which has led to increased transparen­cy and enabled more informed decisions. However, more is urgently needed to fill existing gaps.”

Both Razvi and Marchionni will speak in a “Race to Zero” event at Cop27 this week for The Fashion Industry Charter for Climate Action. The Fashion Charter requires its company signatorie­s to set a

1.5 degree aligned GHG emission reduction target that includes scope 3 emissions from purchased goods and services.

Razvi said at Cop27, the SAC “will be continuing to ramp up our efforts to engage with stakeholde­rs and engage in discussion­s on how to accelerate action and impact to transform the industry.”

Existing collaborat­ions will also continue into 2023, per Razvi, and ongoing assessment­s on SAC's contested sustainabi­lity tools are expected “early next year.”

 ?? ?? The U.N.'s Cop27 becomes a stage for fashion industry alignment on climate change, as with other industries and government­s.
The U.N.'s Cop27 becomes a stage for fashion industry alignment on climate change, as with other industries and government­s.

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