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The Best of BoF 2023: Fashion’s Sustainability Reckoning

Record-breaking temperatures have turned up the heat on fashion’s climate commitments this year. But the industry still has a long way to go to deliver on its sustainabiity ambitions.
A wildfire rages in July as global temperatures soared to record highs.
A wildfire rages in July as global temperatures soared to record highs.

As the world’s hottest year on record draws to a close, fashion still isn’t sweating it. It should be.

Rising temperatures and associated weather extremes pose an increasingly present — and costly — business threat, even as big brands continue to lag on their climate commitments. New regulations aimed at curbing fashion’s environmental impact found many companies unprepared this year. And more is coming.

Part of the problem is that tackling the industry’s sustainability shortfalls requires facing a tangled web of interconnected and systemic challenges that have been made even harder by this year’s gloomy global economic backdrop and geopolitical upheaval.

Fashion’s growth has been powered by cheap energy in the form of coal, cheap materials in the form of plastic synthetics like polyester and cheap labour supplied by a precarious workforce increasingly threatened by a broader global shift towards authoritarianism.

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Changes are underway, from consumer movements that question how much wealthy individuals should shop to new tech platforms that promise to help brands measure their environmental footprint and meet incoming sustainability regulations. But heading into 2024, the industry will need to start to grapple more seriously with its climate risk.

Top Stories

Is Fashion Sleepwalking Into the Climate Crisis?: The extreme and deadly weather experienced around much of the world in July got little mention on big brands’ earnings calls, signalling that investors and executives still aren’t treating climate as an immediate business risk.

A wildfire burns red in a Californian forest in 2021.
(Shutterstock)

A ‘Climate of Fear’ in Fashion’s Supply Chains: The killing of a union leader in Bangladesh this summer has heightened anxiety over the risks facing labour organisers amid a broader, often violent, crackdown on labour rights.

Activist of National Garment Workers Federation Stage a Protest rally demanding justice for Garment workers leader Shahidul, Rabiul Islam and Rabiul killing, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on August 14, 2023
Garments Worker Protest In Dhaka (Getty Images/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Fashion Isn’t Ready for the Regulation Coming for It: New transparency requirements in France are testing big brands as they prepare for an oncoming wave of sustainability regulation.

Shoppers in Paris
(Getty Images)

Is Sustainable Fashion Elitist?: Calling out the industry’s environmental footprint and the true cost of making clothes has touched off a complex and heated debate about the accessibility and affordability of lower-impact fashion.

An Extinction Rebellion protestor holds a banner reading "OVERCONSUMPTION = EXTINCTION" on the runway of the Louis Vuitton Spring/Summer 2022 women's show.
(Getty Images)

Should Fashion Pay for Its ‘Waste Colonialism’?: Every year, millions of tons of old clothes are shipped around the world as part of the global secondhand clothing trade. Nonprofit The Or Foundation and Vestiaire Collective are lobbying for regulation that benefits the countries where they end up.

The Or Foundation’s beach monitoring team trawls through tangles of textile waste on a beach in Ghana.
(The Or Foundation)

The Tech Race to Back Up Fashion’s Green Claims: Brands are turning to AI-powered analytics tools to improve their ability to measure environmental impact in the face of new government regulation. But getting hold of accurate data to support these assessments remains a difficult and largely manual challenge.

Asket’s “Impact Receipt” gives shoppers a breakdown of the environmental impact of its clothes.
(Asket)

The BoF Podcast | The World Is On Fire But We’re Still Buying Shoes: BoF’s Imran Amed speaks with Alec Leach about his manifesto on how we can move towards a better relationship with fashion.

The BoF Podcast | The World Is on Fire, But We’re Still Buying Shoes.
(Luke Marshall Johnson)

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