The Natural Fibres Connect conference is organized by a collective of fibre suppliers, including The Schneider Group, Sustainable Fibre Alliance, Mohair South Africa, and the International Alpaca Association. This year, the conference (and mill tours) attracted over 400 farmers, herders, traders, mill owners, fashion brands, standards owners, sustainability experts, NGOs, and more from all over the world – in-person and online. We gathered in Biella to ‘connect’ over fibre, fashion, and a sustainable future. All these stakeholders can play their own part in a more sustainable future, determining how growing, supplying, working with and marketing natural fibres can play its part in a Nature Positive world.
Why Biella? Why now?
Biella is located about 80 kilometres northwest of Milan, which is arguably the fashion capital of the world. Did you know Milan was once the city of Mediolanum but in the 1500s changed its name to Milan, inspired by the English word ‘milaner’ meaning ‘fine wares’? Subsequently, a milliner, comes from the word Milan, where the making of fashionable ladies’ hats became associated with the city. Today Milan is the home to some of the biggest brands in luxury: Armani, Bottega Veneta, Dolce & Gabbana, Ermenegildo Zegna, Prada, Valentino, Versace, to name but a few.
In the very early days, it was common for families to have looms in their homes, passing the trade down from generation to generation. In the 1700s, during the Industrial Revolution, the fabric industry moved out of Europe to more competitive geographies. To stay competitive, the mill owners of Biella focused on quality in the high-end and luxury market. To meet the needs of this market, the mill owners expanded their fibre sourcing to places like Australia and New Zealand for long and fine merino wool fibre, to Mongolia and China for luxurious cashmere, to Peru for its alpaca fleece, and to South Africa for mohair. With innovation like this in its DNA, Biella looks like the ideal place to be a torch carrier for the changes required for a Nature Positive revolution.
The Biodiversity Consultancy was a proud sponsor of this year's conference, and I was delighted we were not alone talking about a Nature Positive future during the conference. And while the attendees were immersed in the history and tradition of farming and textiles, eyes were very much fixed on the horizon. And where to next. Progressive topics ranging from regenerative grazing to rangeland stewardship, and from the slow fibre movement to regenerated wool were on the table, all potentially contributing to a carbon net zero and Nature Positive world.