WWD Digital Daily

Planet Tracker Accuses Apparel Sector of Ignoring Water Risks

Its latest report claimed that some 90 percent of the examined documents failed to address the issue.

- BY TIANWEI ZHANG

— Planet Tracker, a nonprofit financial think tank and a watchdog on corporate behavior, on Wednesday said it discovered a lack of attention to water-related risks in the apparel sector following a recent analysis of 3,900 documents, transcript­s and filings from apparel-related companies.

The London-based organizati­on claimed in its latest report "Exposing Water Risk" that some 90 percent of the examined documents failed to mention water-related risks, with many barely mentioning it at all.

But more companies are paying attention, as Planet Tracker spotted a notable increase in mentions of waterrelat­ed risk over the analyzed period, growing from about 2,000 in 2018 to more than 9,000 in 2022.

The report said the majority of disclosure­s, which most often appear in sustainabi­lity reports and annual reports, come from nonluxury brands such as Adidas, Fast Retailing, Gap, Levi Strauss and Victoria's Secret, followed by luxury companies like Kering, LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton and Ralph Lauren, while firms mainly operating as apparel retailers show limited mentions of waterrelat­ed risks.

Planet Tracker said the overall lack of awareness around water-related risk in the fashion sector will lead to financial exposure for investors and lenders.

Richard Wielechows­ki, senior investment analyst of textiles at Planet Tracker, said: "The availabili­ty of water is increasing­ly stressed in many parts of the world due to climate change, inefficien­t use and untreated disposal. This could threaten textile production in key regions, disrupting supply chains."

The think tank advised investors to push for corporate change and adequately price water impact into investment­s.

"Planet Tracker calls on investors into the major apparel brands to include water in their investment strategies. Using tools such as the Investor Water Toolkit from Ceres, they should engage with their holdings on water risk," said the report.

They should push companies to publicly disclose their water use and water risks via a standardiz­ed framework such as the CDP to develop a strategy for water risk and start exploring sector transition plans to reduce those risks. They should also support engagement with the textile supply chain to address its use of water and the pollution associated with textile manufactur­e," it added.

Last year, Planet Tracker released the report "Under Dressed." By tracking more than 1,198 environmen­tal, social and corporate governance proposals submitted to retailers' annual shareholde­r meetings, it found that textile sustainabi­lity issues have all been voted down by shareholde­rs, despite modest strides in the past few years.

In 2022, Planet Tracker also published the report “Lifting the Rug," which points out that too few apparel firms name extended suppliers in their supply chain.

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