Representatives from the co-founding organisations of WCTD, including Circle Economy (Netherlands), Centre for Circular Design (London), and Worn Again Technologies (UK), together with Lenzing Fibers (US) and in collaboration with the United Nations Conscious Fashion and Lifestyle Network hosted the Circular Textiles Roundtable with key stakeholders from across the circularity landscape, including textile collectors and sorters to brands/retailers, industry associations, and policy makers, according to a press release by WCTD.
The United Nations Conscious Fashion and Lifestyle Network, a joint initiative of the Fashion Impact Fund and United Nations (UN) Office for Partnerships, is a UN hosted online platform for industry stakeholders, media, governments, and UN system entities to showcase collaborations that accelerate the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals.
Participants were brought together to vision and populate a textiles circularity roadmap to 2050, identifying key milestones for transitioning from the current linear model of ‘make, use, and waste’ to one which is circular, where products and materials are kept in continual circulation, and replace the use of virgin materials use, and industry workers are supported in equitable, socially just, and resilient societies.
The roundtable took a future systems thinking approach, across three core themes: materials and planetary boundaries, products and services, and people and society and across three distinct development phases over the next three decades.
“The scale of change required to transition to a fully circular textiles industry is immense but can be broken down into bite sized and achievable phases and delivery plans. Designing and aligning on circular strategies for implementation and action across the industry today is crucial for achieving future goals and delivering beneficial outcomes for society, economics, and the environment in equal measures. Convening these committed industry leaders to evolve collective knowledge and strengthen relationships is a crucial step in fast-tracking necessary change,” shared Cyndi Rhoades, founder of Worn Again Technologies, co-founder of WCTD.
“The United Nations Conscious Fashion and Lifestyle Network fosters transparent, inclusive, and transformative engagement of global stakeholders to drive urgent action for sustainability. The Circular Textiles roundtable aligned with our objective to mobilise expertise, innovation, technology, and resources towards a sustainable and inclusive COVID-19 recovery, with the Sustainable Development Goals as a guiding framework,” added Kerry Bannigan, executive director, Fashion Impact Fund.
Key insights generated by some of the industry’s leading pioneers included:
Technology: A clear, rationalised plan for scaling up between now and 2050 is needed, for all parts of the collecting, sorting, pre-processing, and recycling stages.
Scope 3: Education, training, new investment, and business models are needed to transform the supply chain, including multi-stakeholder models for ownership and distribution.
Data/Digitisation: A data-driven approach should be embedded as soon as possible, to enable greater understanding and efficiencies for circular flows.
Policy: Development of government policies for micro, meso, and macro actions, that includes alignment between global North and South actors.
Overall, the group expressed a desire to see ‘turbo stakeholder collaboration’ and more partnerships established, at a greater pace. They also noted a lack of information and action around the social innovation potential for the circular textiles industry and requested more information on realistic and fair proposals for transformation, added the release.
“Witnessing leaders across the textile industry come together at the United Nations to engage in collaborative exercises and conversations on circularity, in itself, shows the urgency and need to work together to set up systems and guidelines to achieve this common goal. Most notably, I remember one participant saying ‘We need to go faster. Let's get there now,’” commented Tori Piscatelli, regional marketing manager, Lenzing Fibers.
“At Accelerating Circularity, we call ourselves a ‘Do Tank’ and ask everyone we work with to provide their expertise and energy to making the textile-to-textile circular transition. It's not enough. At WCTD 3 key systems, product and services, materials, and people have been put forth as essential. To enable circularity, we must align on all strategies to implement and accelerate this necessary revolution. ‘Action,’ ‘change,’ ‘fast’ are descriptors we use for the textile industry. Let's show the world we can take the required action to change fast and create a textile industry worthy of the needs of our industry and world,” added Karla Magruder, Accelerating Circularity.
The roadmap template will be released in the coming months and will be used as a foundation for integrating existing industry circularity and decarbonisation commitments, as well as for setting a longer-term framework across a range of topics, including transparency, traceability, social metrics, legislation, design, circular materials, and products and services. The aim of the roadmap is to focus industry activities on aligned activities that will accelerate circularity momentum while support the industry in reaching its climate targets and delivering against multiple UN Sustainable Development Goals.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (NB)