After Glasgow, there is a clamour for fashion companies to increase their commitment to sustainability and supply chain transparency – and for legislation to hold them to their promises

At the Cop26 conference, high-profile British brands including Stella McCartney, Burberry and Mulberry presented their visions for an ethical, sustainable industry. Now, there is an increasing demand for all fashion companies to make legally binding commitments to address the impact their supply chains have on the environment. While hundreds of companies – including Gucci-owner Kering, H&M and Inditex, which owns Zara – have signed up to the UN’s Fashion Industry Charter for Climate Action, which sets science-based targets in line with the Paris agreement, there is no obligation to take part, nor a legal mandate to hold brands to account.

Leading industry figures say that if fashion brands are to have any chance of having a meaningful impact on the climate crisis, legislation is needed.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Katharine Hepburn’s 20 best films – ranked!

With the Hollywood legend’s classic romcom The Philadelphia Story turning 80 next…

‘You can’t run a team on empty’: how the restaurant staff meal is changing

Restaurant workers once lived on coffee and cigarettes. Now more chefs are…

Russians urged to disrupt final day of Vladimir Putin’s presidential election

Voters told to swamp polling stations all at once and spoil ballots,…

Daniel Meikle and Fergus Boylan named Young Cartoonists of the Year

Judges including the Guardian’s Martin Rowson praised Meikle, just 11, in the…