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Fashion Revolution to Brands: ‘Put Your Money Where Your Emissions Are’ | Sustainable Brands

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Fashion Revolution to Brands: ‘Put Your Money Where Your Emissions Are’ | Sustainable Brands

New Fashion Revolution report calls out the world’s largest fashion brands for not investing in a fair transition away from fossil fuels or in protecting workers from extreme-weather events and other threats to their livelihoods.

It would only take an investment of roughly 2 percent of their annual revenue
for big fashion brands to drive a just transition away from fossil fuels to
renewable energy to power their manufacturing sustainably. So says the latest
report from Fashion Revolution, the
world’s largest fashion activism movement.

What Fuels Fashion? — a special edition of the watchdog’s annual
Fashion Transparency Index — analyzes and ranks 250 of the world’s biggest
fashion brands and retailers (turnover of USD$400m or more), based on their
public disclosure of climate and energy-related actions. The in-depth report
covers 70 data points across accountability, decarbonization, energy
procurement
, financing decarbonization, and just transition and
advocacy
.

Fashion remains one of the most polluting industries, with fossil fuels burned
at every stage of production — not to mention those that make up some of our
most popular
fabrics
.
However, the report finds that despite the escalating climate crisis, big
brands’ reduction targets are not ambitious enough to meet the global goal of
limiting temperature rise to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. Instead of
investing in a fair transition away from fossil fuels to renewable energy
sources to power fashion’s supply chain in a clean way, many brands are shifting
the costs onto the factories they work with — burdening workers and communities
with fixing a problem they didn’t create.

While extreme weather could cost nearly 1 million
jobs

in the sector, Fashion Revolution research also reveals that most big fashion
brands are not protecting their supply chain workers. Only 3 percent (just seven
brands) disclose efforts to financially support workers affected by the climate
crisis. This is critical given the weak social protection in garment-producing
countries and the poverty wages and high debt levels of these workers. Frequent
climate events including heat waves, monsoons and droughts are devastating their
livelihoods; Fashion Revolution urges big fashion to urgently provide
compensation mechanisms for these workers — not as charity, but as a matter of
justice.

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“ By investing at least 2 percent of their revenue into clean, renewable energy and upskilling and supporting workers, fashion brands could simultaneously curb the impacts of the climate crisis and reduce poverty and inequality within their supply chains,” asserts Maeve Galvin, Global Policy and Campaigns Director at Fashion Revolution. “Climate breakdown is avoidable because we have the solutions — and big fashion can certainly afford it.”

Other key findings include:

  • Nearly a quarter of the world’s biggest fashion brands disclose nothing on
    decarbonization, signifying that the climate crisis is not a priority.
    With the 2030 deadline to limit global warming to 1.5°C approaching
    in tandem with record-breaking
    heat waves
    ,
    the industry faces a critical challenge. Only four out of 250 have ambitious
    emissions-reduction targets that meet the level of ambition called for by
    the United
    Nations
    . Meanwhile, of the 117 out of 250 brands with decarbonization targets, 105
    brands disclose updates on their progress — but 42 brands report increased
    scope 3
    emissions

    against their baseline year.

  • The fashion industry is lagging significantly in achieving climate targets
    and reducing emissions
    — with 86 percent of companies lacking a public
    coal phase-out target, 94 percent without a public renewable-energy target,
    and 92 percent without a public renewable-energy target for their supply
    chains. Less than half (43 percent) of brands are transparent about their
    energy procurement at the operational level, and even fewer (10 percent) at
    supply chain level. Additionally, no major fashion brand discloses hourly
    matched supply chain electricity use. As a result, big fashion’s
    zero-emissions claims may be disconnected from grid realities — creating a
    false sense of progress against climate targets.

  • The fashion industry is evading accountability both for overproduction and
    the associated emissions released into the atmosphere.
    Most big fashion
    brands (89 percent) do not disclose how many clothes they make
    annually
    .
    Alarmingly, nearly half (45 percent) fail to disclose neither how much they
    make nor the raw material emissions footprint of what is produced —
    signaling the industry prioritizes resource
    exploitation

    whilst avoiding accountability for environmental harms linked to production.

  • So-called ‘sustainable’ clothes may still be produced using fossil
    fuels.
    The fashion industry’s climate impact has largely been scrutinized
    through the lens of the materials used in our clothes, rather than the
    manufacturing processes behind them. While 58 percent of brands disclose
    sustainable material targets, only 11 percent reveal their supply chain’s
    energy sources — meaning ‘sustainable’ clothes might still be made in
    factories powered by fossil fuels.

  • Suppliers need funding, not debt. Despite being the largest emitters
    with the greatest financial responsibility to decarbonize, nearly all (94
    percent) big fashion brands fail to disclose how much they are investing in
    supply chain
    decarbonization
    .
    Only 6 percent disclose contributions, often to collaborative initiatives
    such as the Fashion Climate
    Fund
    and Future Supplier
    Initiative
    — which offer supplier
    loans for infrastructure such as solar panels. However, burdening suppliers
    with loans to meet brand climate targets is unfair and perpetuates existing
    power imbalances between brands, their suppliers and the people who make our
    clothes.

  • Long-term investment is key to decarbonizing fashion’s supply chains.
    The industry’s prioritization of short-term profit is at odds with supply
    chain decarbonization. A clean, fair and just energy
    transition

    must be driven by fashion embracing long-term supplier relationships and
    financial investments through fair purchasing practices. Vertically
    integrated brands and specialized segments such as sportswear outperform
    others in this research, due to greater leverage and commitment to long-term
    improvements. The renewable energy
    transition

    in fashion hinges on systemic changes that prioritize collective brand
    action, responsible purchasing and investment in a stable supply base.

  • The overall average brand score is 18 percent. Puma (75 percent), Gucci (74 percent), H&M (61 percent), Champion (58 percent) and Hanes (58 percent) were top 5; 32 of the 250 companies assessed scored 0.

Dive deeper into What Fuels Fashion? here.

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