TOP STORY

Slow-Burning Furnace: India's Garment Workers Are Absorbing a Crisis Not Theirs

Across India's garment manufacturing hubs, summer no longer arrives as a seasonal inconvenience. It arrives as a compounding risk — one that interacts with factory design, production discipline, and supply-chain economics to concentrate thermal strain on workers who have the least power to resist it. The findings of a HeatWatch-TISS study, drawn from 115 workers, 15 factory units, and a focus group of home-based subcontracted workers in Delhi-NCR, lay out the mechanisms behind that exposure with unusual precision.

 
CIRCULARITY / RECYCLING / SECONDS / WASTE

End of Green Claims in Sight: Fashion Has Been Telling Stories That Science Can Now Fact-Check

Recycled cotton has become one of fashion's most prominent sustainability credentials—and one of its least verifiable. No independent method has existed to confirm how much mechanically recycled cotton a garment actually contains, or whether it derives from post-consumer waste. Researchers are now proposing a laboratory-based toolbox that could, for the first time, provide that confirmation from the fibres themselves.

 
FLASHPOINT: CLIMATE
Climate Action / Decarbonisation Costs

Climate risk is increasingly being modelled not as a reputational concern but as a margin-level financial exposure. New analysis suggests operating profits in apparel could shrink sharply under accelerated net-zero transitions. Kristina Elinder Liljas, Senior Director of Sustainable Finance and Engagement at Apparel Impact Institute, argues that carbon exposure now belongs inside capital allocation models, not sustainability reports.

Beyond Headlines / STICA Report

The apparel sector now produces more climate data than at any earlier point. Fifty companies under the STICA initiative disclosed emissions inventories, transition plans, and targets in 2025. Yet sector-wide emissions continue to rise, and nearly half of signatories report they are behind on primary climate targets. The distance between disclosure capability and actual decarbonisation performance is not closing.

 
 
 
FOCUS: COTTON

End of Green Claims in Sight: Fashion Has Been Telling Stories That Science Can Now Fact-Check

Recycled cotton has become one of fashion's most prominent sustainability credentials—and one of its least verifiable. No independent method has existed to confirm how much mechanically recycled cotton a garment actually contains, or whether it derives from post-consumer waste. Researchers are now proposing a laboratory-based toolbox that could, for the first time, provide that confirmation from the fibres themselves.

 
 
 
SPOTLIGHT EDITIONS: SELECT 4
 
 

"Quote Unquote"

Kristina Elinder Lilja
Kristina Elinder Lilja
Senior Director, Sustainable Finance and Engagement
Apparel Impact Institute
Carbon pricing would be the most structurally embedded risk and hardest to reverse. Carbon pricing is different as it sits directly on Scope 3, where 96–99% of apparel emissions occur. That means it’s embedded in Tier 2 manufacturing and upstream energy systems. Unless those systems decarbonise, cost exposure compounds year over year.

"Quote Unquote"

Elisabetta Rocchi
Elisabetta Rocchi
Associate, Circular Products and Materials
World Business Council for Sustainable Development
By changing how companies engage with material composition, product consumption and disposal in innovative, inventive and more sustainable ways, they’ll be in a strong position to extract more value from the entire textile and footwear product lifecycle. Circular business approaches have the potential to dramatically shift how revenue growth both rewards and incentives businesses in the fashion and textile value chain by decoupling from resource use and delivering superior risk-adjusted returns with more efficient, more sustainable performance.
 
FOCUS: LEATHER

IILF 2026 Exposes Gap Between Boardroom Sustainability and Tannery Floor Reality

Chennai's IILF 2026 exposed contradictions shaping India's leather industry: innovative chemical systems alongside organisational failures, Trump tariffs suppressing demand yet prices holding firm, and sustainability frameworks that never reach tannery workers. The 'Leather Carnival' demonstrated both the sector's professionalisation and its struggle to reconcile traditional identity with market realities.