A report by global environmental action NGO WRAP has established clear benchmarks for repair and resale using data from six companies and helped to develop a single methodology that can be applied by businesses of all shapes and sizes, to give robust and comparable data on big environmental savings from preloved and repair, showing that introducing a little circular living into our lives reduces the price and the environmental price tag too.
The Union Budget 2025-26 emphasis on strengthening domestic manufacturing, enhancing exports, and fostering economic growth is expected to have a significant impact on fashion brands and retailers in India. A texfash analysis that explores its key provisions and expected impact on industry, and how fashion brands and retailers can capitalise on these developments.
A new research has found that Gen Z and Millennial consumers care about sustainability, but lack awareness of the environmental and social impacts of fast fashion.
India’s retail and ecommerce sectors are abuzz with what’s going to be the impact of the Reliance-Shein combine on the overall landscape, and how it is eventually going to play out. A texfash.com analysis.
Fast fashion juggernaut Shein’s $55 million incubator programme in the US is set to add 500 more designers this year to its existing roster of 3000, pushing its aggressive plans for the region.
A new 'purpose-driven' clothing line with 'responsibly sourced materials' from ultra-fast fashion retailer Shein promises an 'affordable option' for customers seeking to make a positive impact with their product choices. Shein is now taking the battle to its critics.
Researchers' recommendations for people concerned about the fashion industry’s ballooning climate impact is simple: cutting down how many new clothes we buy by as much as 75%, buying clothes designed to last, and recycling clothes at the end of their lifetime.
Keeping consumers at the heart of policies/decisionmaking would be key in the days ahead, and it should not just be about products but also how products are used. And, empowering consumers on tackling greenwashing would sum up the process. People in the know tell texfash.com.
The EU Textiles Strategy is laudable in many ways—it rightly assesses the dominance of fast fashion and disposable textiles, and integrates environmental and social concerns in its analysis. A fundamental weakness is the limited connection to the CO2 challenge, and the imperative to become fossil-free or fully biobased by 2050. There is a total lack of proposals related to biobased fibres.
The much-awaited 'EU strategy for sustainable and circular textiles' has been announced. It has a broad vision, wants to clamp down on fast fashion and textile waste, and is insistent on action through a slew of measures and a host of guidelines.