A landmark report from the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL), the Fashion Pact and Conservation International maps out how the fashion, textile and apparel industry can implement the first science-based targets for nature.
Launched at the recent Global Fashion Summit
in Copenhagen, Raising the ambition for nature: A primer on the first science-based targets for nature for the fashion, apparel, and textile sector
is part of a two-year project called Transforming the Fashion Sector With
Nature, funded by the Global Environment Facility. It provides a critical
introduction for the fashion, textile and apparel industry on how to set
measurable nature targets.
The authors, in collaboration with the Science Based Targets
Network (SBTN) and Textile
Exchange, hope their work will act as a blueprint
for other industries to take meaningful action on nature.
“We are pleased to have been able to work with the Fashion Pact and Conservation International to develop the first-ever guide to SBTN targets for a specific industry and how they might be implemented,” says Eliot Whittington, Chief Systems Change Officer at CISL. “This primer offers the fashion sector clear guidance on what it needs to do — an essential tool for one of the industries most reliant on and engaged with natural systems. We hope this paves the way for a transformation of the fashion, textiles and apparel industry and that other sectors will swiftly follow suit.”
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Textile production makes up 10 percent of the world’s carbon emissions,
according to the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
and is extremely dependent on nature for raw materials and water.
Globally, the US$1.5
trillion-a-year
industry plays a substantial role in nature loss — from
cotton,
leather
and polyester
production all
the way to the impact of paper packaging on
forestry.
Scientists also estimate that 35
percent
of the microplastics found in oceans can be traced to textiles, making them the
largest source of microplastic pollution. There has also been unprecedented
growth in the sector over the past decades, with clothing production
doubling
between 2000 and 2014. It is anticipated to grow to US$2
trillion
per year by 2027 — meaning impacts and dependencies on nature will only
increase, further highlighting the need for industry action.
As awareness of the critical role of biodiversity — and the enormous risks to
business and the
economy
of continuing to destroy it — have grown in recent years, a number of
tools
and
technologies
have emerged aimed at helping companies understand and address their impacts on
the natural world; but there had yet to be any standardization. Released in
May,
SBTN’s new science-based targets for nature complement existing, science-based
climate
targets by
allowing companies to take holistic action to address their impacts in the face
of mounting environmental and social crises. Upon release, 17 global companies —
including luxury fashion houses
Kering
and LVMH — committed to be among the first to set science-based targets for
nature before the end of this year.
Launched by French President Emmanuel Macron at the G7 Summit in 2019,
The Fashion
Pact
represents one-third of the global fashion industry and is committed to
mitigating the impact of climate change, restoring biodiversity and protecting
the oceans. The initiative brings together CEOs and senior leaders to accelerate
joint action across the value chain.
“Thanks to the SBTN program, companies now have the chance of aligning
biodiversity strategies with the latest available science and guidelines,” says
H&M CEO and Fashion Pact co-chair Helena
Helmersson. “As part of the
pilot, we will continue providing industry-wide input to the development of the
SBTN guidance to reduce the impact of our entire sector, and we hope this work
will inspire many others to follow. The Fashion Pact will continue playing an
important role in bringing attention to challenges where we can come together
and accelerating change in the industry.”
The report includes an introduction to the science-based targets for nature, an
illustrative case study with guidance to show how targets are calculated and
set, and actions companies can take now to address nature loss.
“Textile Exchange welcomes the publication of this report, to provide
much-needed guidance on how companies in our industry can get started with
Science-Based Targets for Nature," says Beth Jensen, Climate+ Impact Director at Textile Exchange. "This report complements the forthcoming
Biodiversity Landscape Analysis report — which is also a collaboration among
Textile Exchange, The Fashion Pact and Conservation International — and will
provide a reference point on foundational biodiversity concepts and frameworks
and what they really mean for our industry. Between these two reports, brands
and other industry stakeholders will be equipped with initial guidance to begin
integrating biodiversity into their strategies.”
Raising the ambition for nature lays out actions companies can take now to
help address practices that harm nature, including:
“In the midst of an ecological crisis, it is more vital than ever for companies
to shift to regenerative business
models which value,
protect and restore nature,” says Paul
Polman, business leader, co-chair and
co-founder of The Fashion Pact. “It’s time for the fashion, textile and apparel
industry to play its part in building a nature-positive
economy;
and the CEOs and companies who move without delay will reap the benefits — and
so will their investors. This primer illuminates the path to setting measurable
biodiversity targets and taking the action needed to deliver them."
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Jul 7, 2023 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST