REPORTS
From sorters handbooks to tracing organic cotton from farm to consumer, dive into our open-source reports offering a wealth of insight and tools to embrace and contribute to sustainable fashion practices.
With contributions from our ecosystem of thought leaders, brand partners and innovators all providing knowledge to drive the transition towards a circular fashion industry.
All Reports
The Rise of Reusable Packaging: Understanding the Impact & Mapping a Path to Scale
Packaging, in all its different forms, is ubiquitous across the fashion industry. This is no more evident than the single-use plastic and cardboard packaging that enables the burgeoning e-commerce market.
Understanding “Bio” Material Innovations
The last 5 years have seen a pronounced increase in excitement around “biomaterials” for the fashion industry. As brands consider their environmental and social impacts, along with rising ethical concerns from consumers, the search for more ‘sustainable’ alternatives is driving innovation. Wider trends are further contributing to interest in biomaterials; from climate change and the potential for lower carbon footprints vs fossil based synthetic materials, the war on plastics, to the rapid growth of veganism1 and a rush to find alternatives to animal derived materials. Biomaterials, however, remain an ill defined category.
Fashion for Good Five Year Progress Report
In 2017, we started Fashion for Good with a bold ambition to make all fashion a force for good. Much of this progress is reflected in this report, specifically highlighting our innovation platform, investments, and convening activities across our global footprint. We also reflect on the biggest lessons we have learned over the past 5 years.
The Textile Tracer Assessment
This project involved a detailed analysis and assessment of physical tracer technologies for the textile industry, aimed at improving the traceability of fibres and materials across the supply chain. It evaluated forensic and additive tracers as solutions to verify the origins of materials and strengthen transparency in the textile supply chain.
Sorting For Circularity Europe: Sorters Handbook
The Sorting for Circularity Europe project aims to increase harmonisation between the sorting and recycling industry and stimulate a recycling market for unwanted textiles that can generate new revenue streams for sorters. Conducting analyses across Europe, in Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, and the United Kingdom, the project provides the most comprehensive and representative snapshot of post-consumer textiles composition generated in Europe to date.
Sorting For Circularity Europe: An Evaluation And Commercial Assessment Of Textile Waste Across Europe
The Sorting for Circularity Europe project was launched in early 2021 and initiated by Fashion for Good together with Circle Economy. The project was made possible by catalytic funding from Laudes Foundation and brand partners, adidas, BESTSELLER, Inditex and Zalando, with H&M Group as key project partners. The project addressed the need for data on textile waste in the market, identifying waste types and recycling opportunities.
Textile Processing Guide: Pretreatment, Colouration and Finishing
The impact of today’s fashion industry has far reaching environmental consequences. And while raw material production and end of use may spring to mind, the processing stage of the supply chain, including pretreatment, colouration (dyeing and printing) and finishing, is often overlooked as a critical area for pivotal and positive change. This guide, based on industry and Fashion for Good research, is designed to provide an overview and deeper understanding of the processing stage, including innovative technologies that would help drastically reduce the water, energy and chemistry used, as well as replacing hazardous chemistry currently used.
Sorting for Circularity USA
The project aimed to assess the potential for fibre-to-fibre recycling in the United States. The project evaluated consumer behaviour around textile disposal and analysed post-consumer textile waste to determine its suitability for recycling. The goal was to promote circularity by improving textile collection systems and supporting the development of recycling infrastructures and technologies.
Sorting for Circularity India: Business Case Assessment
About 48% of the Post-consumer Domestic Waste (PCD) has the potential to be valorised via formalised sorting hubs. Out of this, 35% of the waste can have better utilisation by adopting semiautomated & automated technologies, leading to a revenue increase of 10%. At an industry level, this translates to 1,380 kilo tonnes of waste and INR 388 Cr (going up to INR 1,348 crores in some cases) of additional revenue in one year. However, an enabling environment needs to be created to make these technologies economically viable for a sorting hub.
Sorting for Circularity: Wealth In Waste
The Textile and Apparel industry is one of the largest contributors to India’s economy constituting 2% of total GDP, 12% of total exports, 7% of industry output in value terms, while employing over 45 million individuals.3 4 India is also one of the largest producers of cotton, jute and silk. Over 25% of the global cotton production comes from India.5 Further, India has processing infrastructure and skilled workforce for all activities ranging from spinning to apparel production, making it a competitive key sourcing destination for most global brands.
Safermade Report
In the next ten years, the textile and apparel industry will adopt new materials that deliver unprecedented performance and eliminate harmful chemicals from products and manufacturing processes, emerging as a circular and regenerative sector of the economy.
The Future of Circular Fashion
We need to create a circular fashion system. A system that combines new business models with innovative design, technologies and materials that eliminate waste and pollution and drive positive impact across the fashion value chain. Accenture Strategy and Fashion for Good have collaborated to produce this report, combining our unique expertise of the circular economy and fashion industry, to explore the financial viability of circular business models.