Recent studies estimate that 2-4 percent of global greenhouse gas
emissions stem from the fashion industry. With global average temperatures
projected to rise by 3° Celsius this century — well beyond the 1.5°
Celsius
goal
of the Paris Agreement — disruptive solutions and unprecedented actions are
needed to curb emissions and achieve net zero by 2050.
A new
report
— co-authored by Fashion for Good and the Apparel Impact Institute
(Aii) and sponsored by
HSBC
— for the first time charts a trajectory for the industry to meet the net-zero
ambition, mapping the integral levers across existing solutions such as
renewable energy, and emerging innovations such as next-generation
materials
and
circular
and other end-of-life solutions for
textiles.
Estimating an investment opportunity of $1 trillion to finance the transition,
the report breaks down the funding needed by solution category and identifies
the types of funders best placed to take advantage of the opportunity and
benefit from the positive returns.
Unlocking the Trillion-Dollar Fashion Decarbonization Opportunity estimates the emissions-reduction potential of
existing and emerging solutions, and calculates the finance needed to scale them
and drive the industry to net zero by 2050 — a critical step to mapping the path
and actions for the fashion industry in the decades to come. The findings in the
report are significant — analysis shows an estimated $1 trillion is required to
finance the decarbonization of the fashion industry by 2050.
“Reducing carbon emissions will be one of, if not the, defining challenge of
our generation and indeed the fashion industry. The good news is that a strong
pipeline of solutions — both disruptive and ready to be implemented — can
drastically decarbonize the industry,” says Katrin Ley, Managing Director at
Fashion for Good. “This report highlights that not only are the opportunities
plentiful and financially attractive — they are key to getting us to a net-zero,
circular industry.”
Though $1 trillion may sound substantial, the majority of this spend is
allocated to projects that offer an attractive financial, as well as
environmental, return on investment. More than $35 trillion of financial
capital is available globally for good-return environmental, social, and
governance (ESG) investments, a figure expected to exceed $50 trillion by
2025,
according to Bloomberg Intelligence. However, critical barriers to unlocking
the necessary funding remain. With input from key industry stakeholders, the
report highlights those barriers and presents examples of financing
opportunities.
“This report reframes decarbonization as an investment opportunity, rather than
a cost,” says Aii President Lewis Perkins. “These proven, investable
solutions require a tremendous amount of capital; and we now need to create the
pathways for all forms of financial capital in order to bring them to scale.”
The financing opportunity is multi-faceted and will require a committed and
coordinated effort by brands, manufacturers, philanthropy, government and
industry organizations. The report splits up the amount of finance required per
emission-reduction solution across the different financiers, appealing to
different risk appetites and profiles, and providing a nuanced and detailed
pathway to achieving net zero.
Key findings include:
-
An estimated 47 percent of CO2 reductions come from implementing existing
solutions, 39 percent comes from scaling emerging solutions, and 14 percent
from other solutions — including reducing overproduction, material
efficiency improvements, and scaling circular business
models.
-
The report uncovers key actions and recommendations to unlock the $1
trillion financing opportunity, including:
-
the cost breakdown by financier groups needed to accelerate the
transition to a net-zero industry
-
for governments to strengthen policy framework and mechanisms to
catalyze private investment.
-
for philanthropies to encourage coordination and explore
blended-capital
approaches.
-
for brands to pursue stronger engagement and commitment to innovation
and suppliers.
-
for manufacturers to adopt a strategic capital improvement plan that is
aligned with brand partners
-
for banks and lenders to prioritize key production regions and
innovative financing opportunities
“The fashion industry is becoming increasingly aware of its environmental impact
and of the need to swiftly transition to net zero,” said Zoë Knight,
Managing Director and Group Head of the HSBC Centre of Sustainable Finance.
“This report shows that, while there are challenges to overcome, this transition
is possible and will open up new opportunities for businesses in this sector.
Collective action is critical. The financial system must play its part by
providing the investment to fund net-zero solutions at scale.”
The full report and findings can be downloaded and read here.
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Dec 29, 2021 7am EST / 4am PST / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET