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Environmental Sustainability in the Fashion Industry – Geneva Environment Network

Oct 15, 2024Oct 15, 2024

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Last updated: 02 Oct 2024

Chemicals and Pollution | Climate | Green Economy | Human Rights and Environment | Plastics | Water

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Fast fashion comes at an astonishing environmental and social cost. While the impacts of the fashion industry in terms of pollution, water use, carbon emissions, human rights, and gender inequality are increasing, the need for a shift to sustainable fashion is evident. Organizations in Geneva and beyond are joining efforts to shift the fashion economy and foster international cooperation on the issue.

The clothing industry represents an important part of our economies, with a value of USD 1.3 trillion and employing over 300 million people along the value chain (Ellen MacArthur Foundation). In the last 20 years, global fibre production has almost doubled from 58 million tonnes in 2000 to 116 million tonnes in 2022, and is expected to continue to grow to 147 million tonnes in 2030 if business as usual continues (Textile Exchange 2023). While people bought 60% more garments in 2014 than in 2000, they only kept the clothes for half as long (McKinsey & Company, 2016).

While the fashion sector is booming, increasing attention has been brought to the impressive range of negative environmental impacts that the industry is responsible for. The fashion industry is the second-biggest consumer of water and is responsible for 2-8 % of global carbon emissions.

What’s more, 85% of all textiles go to the dump each year (UNECE, 2018), and washing some types of clothes sends significant amount of microplastics into the ocean.

The Environmental Footprint of Fast Fashion

More facts and sources on Business Insider

Fast fashion also has a human cost: textile workers, primarly women in developing countries, are often paid derisory wages and forced to work long hours in appalling conditions (UNEP, 2018; WRI, 2019). In many places, these conditions create infringements on human rights (Human Rights Watch). Use of chemicals in clothes production also raise serious health concerns, both for the workers in the industry and consumers. Additional impacts on health also arise from the pollution described previously.

The environmental and social cost of the fashion industry forces us to rethink fast fashion, and stresses the need for more sustainable business models and practices. Resources hereunder provide additional information on the environmental impacts of fashion, and potential pathways for change.

After the Second World War, the development of synthetic textiles, such as polyester and nylon, transformed the fashion industry. From only a few thousand tonnes in 1940, global consumption of synthetic fibres rose to more than 60 million tonnes in 2018. Since the late 1990s, polyester is the most commonly used fibre in textiles. The production of chemical fibers surpassed cotton production in the mid-1990s and has more than doubled in the last 20 years. In 2020, synthetic fibers accounted for approximately 64 percent of global fiber production.Today, an estimated 60% of clothing and 70 % of household textiles are made of synthetic fibres.

These plastic-based textiles have a significant impact on the environment and climate throughout their life cycle due to emissions of greenhouse gases and pollutants. The textile sector is a growing contributor to the climate crisis, with about 1% of crude oil production used to produce synthetic fibres (European Environment Agency).

The fashion sector is also an important source of plastic leakage into the environment. The textile value chain is responsible for 9% of annual microfibre pollution to oceans (UNEP, 2021).

Consideration of the textile sector will thus be important for tackling the ongoing plastic crisis. Plastic pollution is one of the major environmental crises of our times, and efforts from various actors are underway to address it. This includes negotiations towards an international legally-binding agreement on plastic pollution, initiated by the resolution adopted at the UN Environment Assembly in March 2022. Learn more about the plastic pollution crisis, governance processes to address it and the work of Geneva-based organizations on the matter in our Plastics and the Environment series.

As fashion value chains are globalized and the industry has a significant impact on the achievement of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), international cooperation is important to foster sustainable fashion.

Impact of the fashion industry on the SDGs (UNECE, 2018)

Launched at the fourth UN Environment Assembly (UNEA-4), the UN Alliance for Sustainable Fashion is seeking to halt the environmentally and socially destructive practices of fashion. The Alliance is improving collaboration among UN agencies by analyzing their efforts in making fashion sustainable, identifying solutions and gaps in their actions, and presenting these findings to governments to trigger policy. Additionally, the Forests for Fashion Initiative, led by UNECE, FAO, and partners, supports innovative solutions in fashion through sustainable forests-based materials. Several other international organizations are working on global efforts to foster more sustainable fashion. Additional information on these initiatives can be found in the links below.

Launched at COP24 in 2021, the Fashion Industry Charter for Climate Change serves as a roadmap to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050 within the textile, clothing and fashion industries.

Signatories and Supporting Organizations under the Charter work within Working Groups aiming to identify and amplify best practices, strengthen existing efforts, identify and address gaps, facilitate and strengthen collaboration among relevant stakeholders join resources and share tools to enable the sector to achieve its climate targets. More resources on Charter and related activities can be found here.

Cotton is one of the most common fabrics used for clothes. Producing cotton sustains the livelihood of 28.67 million people and provides benefits to over 100 million families across the globe (WTO, 2020). Recognizing the critical role of cotton for economic development, international trade, and poverty alleviation, the UN General Assembly decided to proclaim World Cotton Day on 7 October (A/RES/75/318).

Cotton production can have consequent impacts on the planet due to the use of pesticides, high water consumption, and the conversion of habitat to agricultural use. Conventional production practices can result in soil erosion and degradation, water contamination, and other forms of pollution. Therefore, supporting sustainable models of cotton production is essential if we are to achieve the SDGs. Learn more about environmental sustainability in the cotton sector through the resources below.

On the fourth official UN World Cotton Day, under the theme “Cotton for Good”, the United Nations wants to raise visibility of the cotton sector and awareness of the critical role that it plays in economic development, international trade and poverty alleviation. The observance also aims to highlight the importance of sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent work for all.

Many actors in Geneva are involved in promoting sustainable production and consumption patterns in the cotton industry (see section below for details). This year’s official celebration takes place on 7 October in Cotonou, Benin, with the participation of Geneva actors such as the World Trade Organization, International Trade Centre, UN Conference on Trade and Development. This marks the first time WCD will be celebrated on the African Continent.

On the third official UN World Cotton Day, under the theme “Making cotton fair and sustainable for all: from farm to fashion”, the United Nations wants to raise visibility of the cotton sector and awareness of the critical role that it plays in economic development, international trade and poverty alleviation. The observance also aims to highlight the importance of sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent work for all.

Many actors in Geneva are involved in promoting sustainable production and consumption patterns in the cotton industry (see section below for details). This year’s official celebration that took place on 4 October in Vienna had the participation of Geneva actors such as the World Trade Organization, International Trade Centre, UN Conference on Trade and Development, International Labour Organization, and Better Cotton Initiative.

By alphabetical order

The Better Cotton Initiative (BCI), the largest cotton sustainability programme in the world, aims to make global cotton production better for the people who produce it, better for the environment it grows in and better for the sector’s future.

ILO promotes decent work in the textiles, clothing, leather and footwear sector through social dialogue, knowledge sharing, international labour standards, capacity building, partnerships and policy support.

EFI is a flagship programme of the International Trade Centre, which connects marginalised artisans from the developing world – the majority of them women – to international fashion houses for mutual benefit. EFI also hosts the Secretariat of the UN Alliance for Sustainable Fashion

SAICM’s multi-stakeholder project on chemicals in products promotes information sharing and proposes cooperative actions to address chemicals contained in products, with textile being one of the focus areas.

UNCTAD engages with circular economy and sustainable trade in the textile industry through research work and support to developing countries.

UNECE’s work on trade in the textile and leather sector focuses on improving transparency and traceability in order to identify and address labor and human rights violations and environmental impacts while embracing more sustainable production and consumption patterns. UNECE also promotes sustainable innovation in the fashion sector through its work on sustainable forest products.

The UN Environment Programme’s work on sustainable and circular textiles applies a value-chain approach, which leads to changes at each stage in the value chain while involving players of all sizes and from all market segments. In order to develop a roadmap, UNEP conducted a Global Stocktaking. Updates on UNEP’s activites on this fastly-evolving topic are publishe and accessible on the One Planet Network platform.

The WBCSD support business initiatives for circular economy and sustainable consumption and production, including in the fashion industry.

At the WTO, cotton is the sole commodity discussed separately following an initiative launched by the Cotton-4 in 2003. The initiative aims to make international trade in cotton fairer and to shed light on the linkages between trade, cotton and development.

UN system’s engagement is larger than the Geneva-based organizations presented here. Members of the UN Alliance for Sustainable Fashion also include UNDP, UNEP, UN Global Compact, UNFCCC and UNOPS.

While international organizations, governments and businesses work on solutions to shift the fashion industry toward a more sustainable pathway, consumers can also play a role with their daily actions. This section provides resources on the actions individuals can take to support sustainability in their apparel choices.

Further resources and events to learn about environmental sustainability in the fashion industry are provided below. This page is regularly updated.

The Environmental Footprint of Fast FashionrecycledFashion Crimes | The European Retail Giant linked to dirty Brazilian cottonHow Fast, Cheap Fashion Is Polluting the PlanetEn mode avion, les géants de la fast fashion Zara et Shein attisent la crise climatique A Zero Waste Vision for Fashion – Chapter 1: All We Need Is Less New Analysis Shows How Fashion Industry Can Lighten its Carbon Footprint Clothed in chemicals: A new book sheds light on the toxic substances we wear daily Fashion Industry Needs to Make Climate Action a Top TrendFibre recyclée : beaucoup de marketing, peu d’écologieLa fast fashion « utilise des stratégies marketing redoutables pour rendre les jeunes accros »Chile’s Atacama Desert: Where Fast Fashion Goes to DieEffective regulations? Environmental impact assessment in the textile and garment sector in Bangladesh, Cambodia, Indonesia and Viet NamCan an end-to-end sustainability standard change fashion?Plastic microfibres illustrate the challenges of fighting marine litterFast fashion speeding toward environmental disaster, report warnsCan fashion ever be sustainable?These facts show how unsustainable the fashion industry isThe huge toll of ‘fast fashion’ on the planet – and why the answer could be circularFashion’s tiny hidden secretBy the numbers: the economic, social and environmental impacts of “fast fashion”The global environmental injustice of fast fashionPutting the brakes on fast fashionFashion is an environmental and social emergency, but can also drive progress towards the Sustainable Development GoalsTimeout for fast fashionmicrofibre pollutionThe hidden plastics in our clothes – and how to avoid them Toxics in Our ClothingYour clothes are harming the planet. Here’s how a new washing machine could stop itHow do you tackle microplastics? Start with your washing machine.Filtration as an effective and near-term solution to reduce the release of microplastics in the environmentDow said it was recycling our shoes. We found them at an Indonesian flea marketTrashion: The stealth export of waste plastic clothes to Kenya | ReportTackling Microfibers at Source: Investigating opportunities to reduce microfiber pollution from the fashion industry “Do clothes make us sick? Fashion, fibers and human health” A review on microplastic emission from textile materials and its reduction techniquesMicroplastics from textiles: towards a circular economy for textiles in EuropeYour Clothes Are Probably Made Of Plastic: What Fabrics To AvoidPlastic microfibres illustrate the challenges of fighting marine litterThe invisible threat: microplastics from your clothesPlastic in textiles: towards a circular economy for synthetic textiles in Europe More than ever, our clothes are made of plastic. Just washing them can pollute the oceansThe UN Alliance for sustainable fashionTraceability for Sustainable Garment and FootwearEthical Fashion InitiativeUNECE and ECLAC propose measures to reduce environmental and health impacts of global trade of second-hand clothesUNECE calls on fashion industry to fully embrace sustainability |The Sustainable Fashion Communication PlaybookSustainability and Circularity in the Textile Value Chain: A Global RoadmapCNMI and EFI announce launch of joint ESG Framework for fashion and 2022 Sustainable Fashion AwardsUNECE launches ‘The Sustainability Pledge’ for measurable and verifiable sustainability in the garment and footwear sectorCall to Action for Traceability, Transparency, Sustainability and Circularity of Value Chains in the Garment and Footwear SectorEnhancing Traceability and Transparency of Sustainable Value Chains in the Garment and Footwear SectorSustainability and Circularity in the Textile Value ChainTransparency and Traceability can support the fashion industry’s post-COVID recovery toward resilient and sustainable value chainsOn trend: sustainable fashion in the wake of COVID-19UNECE traceability initiative can accelerate fashion industry’s shift to more sustainable and circular modelSAICM details efforts to reduce chemicals of concern in textiles, toys, building materials and electronicsBuilding Circularity in the Textile Value ChainUN launches drive to highlight environmental cost of staying fashionableForests for Fashion initiative sets new trendsUN Alliance For Sustainable Fashion addresses damage of ‘fast fashion’The future of work in textiles, clothing, leather and footwearMade in ForestsA new textiles economy : redesigning fashion’s futureUNCTAD establishes three partnerships to boost fashion industry´s support of biodiversityUNEP’s textiles newsletterWorld Cotton DayWhy cotton? Facts & figuresWTO, ITC and UNCTAD initiative on cotton by-productsCotton: Impacts & ActionBetter Cotton InitiativeMeasuring Sustainability in Cotton Farming Systemsofficial celebration takes place on 7 October in Cotonou, Benin,Responsible purchasingGe-reutiliseLabels and norms in FashionWhere to find information on fairer fashion Guide du shopping éthique (in French)Kicking circular fashion into high gear The Sustainable Fashion Communication Playbook Sustainability and Circularity in the Textile Value Chain – A Global Roadmap The Clothes We Wear