Price Parity Toolkit

Price Parity Toolkit

The Price Parity Toolkit (PPT) was designed to help bridge the price gap between next-gen* and conventional materials. This industry-supported framework, with catalytic funding from Laudes Foundation and developed by Fashion for Good with support from Canopy, Finance Earth and select brands and fibre producers, introduces a financing mechanism. This mechanism aims to decouple price premiums early in the supply chain, thereby enabling the adoption and scaling of lower-impact materials.

What’s the challenge?

The fashion industry needs urgent solutions to transition to lower-impact materials, but a major barrier for commercial scale adoption remains: price. 

While next-gen materials hold environmental promise, most are still on their journey to scale and as such, have attached price premiums – which can be seen as transition costs – that make them more expensive than their conventional counterparts. In order to achieve commercial scale, these materials require investment, volume adoption and time.

Without intervention, the industry risks stagnation, and the adoption of next-gen materials is slowed by fragmented demand and compounding supply chain markups.

Premium Hotspots

The types of premiums encountered in the next-gen value chain:

Innovation Premium

Associated with the invention of new raw materials, derived from new feedstocks or new processes that are not yet available at commercial scale.

Integration Premium*

Associated with supply chain integration efforts carried out by the downstream supplier(s). These efforts can look like undesired wastage, machine down-time for non-continuous production and other technology-specific challenges.

Supply Chain Premium

Commonly associated with the compounding effect of previously added mark-ups (a term we often also call “premium amplification”). These can be associated with both real costs incurred as well as artificial markups.

* The PPT mechanism addresses the integration premium, but excludes initial R&D costs. It best supports innovations ready for larger-scale commercialisation and validated by the supply chain, rather than early-stage R&D.

How it works

Price Parity Toolkit Mechanism

The Price Parity Toolkit (PPT) tackles the pricing hurdle and unlocks scale through its core tool: premium decoupling. This financial mechanism separates the price premium of next-gen materials at an  early stage of the supply chain.

How the Mechanism Works

The premium associated with next-gen materials is paid by the brand as a separate financial contribution to earlier supply chain stages (e.g., at Tier 4 or Tier 5). This payment is routed via the innovator or an intermediary. This strategic decoupling allows the next-gen material to move through all subsequent tiers at the same price as conventional alternatives, achieving price parity.

Why Decoupling is Essential

Without the PPT, the initial material premium (Innovation and Integration premiums) would be amplified (compounded) throughout the supply chain, leading to compounded high costs and artificial markups on the final product at Tier 0. The decoupling mechanism prevents this amplification, resulting in a total cost that is lower than if the premium were carried through to the end. This approach avoids the magnification of innovation and integration costs, thereby mitigating unjustified ‘sustainability premiums’ while still compensating for genuine higher-cost processes.

Implementation and Cost

Brands assume this cost based on the materials sourced, often funding it directly at the innovator. Brands who utilise internal dedicated funds (e.g., innovation budget) outside of their sourcing budget benefit by maintaining undisturbed product and sourcing margins.

The guidance contains a step-by-step guide for brands, innovators, and suppliers interested in operationalising the PPT mechanism and an overview of legal and tax considerations. Example agreements are available on the Price Parity Toolkit website.

Key Outcomes

  • Reduced total cost of product

    By decoupling the premium at an early stage, the product is expected to move through the supply chain at price parity. With the price premium amplification effect reduced or eliminated, the cost of the product as it reaches the brand is expected to be significantly lower or at cost parity with conventional.

  • Product & sourcing teams margin targets not affected

    Given the price parity of the product, brands can integrate next-gen materials without disrupting their sourcing processes from a financial perspective. The financial contribution toward the premium can be managed through separate internal budgets or specialised funds (e.g. innovation, sustainability, marketing).

  • Potential for increased manufacturing optimisation

    With the demand from brands due to the predicted effects of the premium decoupling mechanism (reduced costs and easier sourcing), manufacturers can optimise their processes for next-gen materials, further allowing reduction in premiums.

     

  • Accelerated trajectory to price parity

    As demand increases and manufacturing adjusts across the value chain, scaling operations helps innovators improve efficiency and achieve economies of scale. Over time, this effect should reduce the financial contribution required from brands.

Ecosystem Partners

* Next-gen materials are innovative materials with desired improved environmental outcomes aiming to solve complex sustainability and circularity challenges faced by the industry. For a full definition, please check our Executive Guide report.

Relevant Resources

Other Projects

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      Processing

    Retrofit Track

    Fashion for Good, in collaboration with its industry partner, the Apparel Impact Institute (Aii), is offering implementation support through the Retrofit Track in India. This is a limited opportunity, under which only three shortlisted facilities will receive hands-on guidance to apply the blueprint in their operations.

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      Processing

    Demonstrator

    Decarbonising textile processing cannot be achieved through individual technologies alone. It requires end-to-end implementation in real factories, where multiple innovations must operate together under production constraints, commercial timelines, and regional infrastructure realities. Demonstrator facilities play a critical role in bridging this gap — translating validated technologies into integrated, operating factories that generate the technical, financial, and operational evidence needed for scale.

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      Processing

    Blueprints

    The open-source, modular blueprint for sustainable Tier-2 textile manufacturing is a forward-looking, industry-wide tool designed to accelerate adoption of next-generation sustainability practices. It enables manufacturers to build and implement near-net-zero factories by providing clear operational pathways, alongside economic viability and social impact analysis of advanced processes and solutions. By breaking complex technical recommendations into adaptable modules, the blueprint allows manufacturers of all scales to integrate improvements in a phased, practical way, aligned with globally benchmarked best practices and emerging regulatory standards. The project aims to cover 7 geographies by 2030.