"Some fashion lasts. Some fashion's fast"
Bill McRaith who held various senior roles at the likes of Victoria’s Secret, Walmart and PVH, challenged the idea that big brands would be willing to reduce their output and stagnate their growth, even for the sake of the planet. He suggested that, if we want these brands to voluntarily adopt standards (that when applied by organizations of their size, could drastically impact fashion’s environmental footprint for the better) we may need to meet them halfway.
“To develop standards, we need to think about clothes that are “single use”, and clothes that are1,000 uses”, he said. “Clothes that are meant to last 1,000+ uses, should be designed to be repairable. And fast fashion should be designed to be recyclable.”
Fast fashion is often painted as the enemy, and in a lot of ways, it is. But often it provides a product at a price point that meets the needs of consumers who can’t afford to pay more.
There were challenges from others in the workshop to this. Ideally, everyone would be able to stock their wardrobes with well-made clothes that are designed to last 1,000+ uses, but until everyone comes around to the concept of renting or buying second hand, fast fashion is still a lifeline for a lot of people looking for affordability in the face of economic pressures.
Whilst support for accessibility and affordability of more sustainable options would help towards the goal of a more sustainable industry, it could also be helpful to provide best practice support for ‘fast’ fashion options (e.g., around design for easy recycling and/or reuse).
The future of sustainable fashion is open source
“We need standards that almost force us, as an industry, to collaborate, collude and conspire against fashion’s current environmental impact” commented Sasha MacFarlane – a supply chain consultant and the former Director of Strategic Initiatives at PVH.
There’s a race for brands to be the first with a successful resale program, or the first with a collection made with the highest percentage of recycled materials. Some argued that this mentality is stopping organizations from making meaningful change and that, if sustainability is seen as the goal, and not simply a competitive advantage, the fashion industry has to work together.
Building demand for sustainable solutions
“People have to realize that unless we collaborate, there’s not going to be enough demand for a shift to happen” said Sasha MacFarlane. “Some of the brands I’ve worked for are big global brands [e.g. Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger] but here in the UK, for example, we still don’t have enough demand or appetite from consumers to create an infrastructure for on-demand manufacturing.”
A current lack of demand from consumers means that organizations often don’t see the business case for investing in more sustainable solutions, and could even lose money by building their own infrastructure. But, if brands worked together, shared the cost and made a collective effort to increase market demand for sustainable options, they could succeed in making sustainability go mainstream.
Standards could reference existing legislation
“What the British fashion industry is calling for, is a set of standards that coordinates and centralizes what sustainability actually means for the UK: A starting point might be based on current legislation like the US Fashion Act… and based on what the EU are doing. Take that, plus science-based targets, the sustainable development goals, greenhouse gas protocols and more, and condense down and extract the best of all of it to give the UK fashion industry a roadmap and a set of baselines by which they can move forward." Mary Fellowes, GreenWith Studio.
Collective transparency
For those in the fashion industry to shift from seeing each other as competition, and instead, view themselves as a community of problem solvers, knowledge and resource sharing is key to transparency. In order for this to be most effective, it was suggested that the industry needs to be open about:
- Best practices,
- Sustainable suppliers,
- Standardized terminology to mitigate greenwashing,
- Standardized sizing,
- Detailed process outlines and guidance.
It was further suggested, during the discussions throughout the day, that potentially a standard on peer-to-peer transparency could help to eradicate some of the inconsistencies within the fashion industry and accelerate change through collaboration.