The Sustainable Apparel Coalition (SAC) says its new Decarbonization Program will support and drive the sector to work towards the ambitious, urgent and necessary emissions reduction of 45% by 2030 in order to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees C.

The SAC program will focus on collaboration, member support and delivering tools and guidance to make achieving these targets around emissions possible.

Taking a collaborative approach, the program will drive action across the SAC’s membership – which represents about half of the apparel and footwear industry – and the wider industry. By bringing together the full supply chain, from brands and retailers to manufacturers and factories, the SAC will identify the biggest opportunities for impact and help accelerate the large-scale change needed to drive emissions reduction across the industry at scale.

As part of the Decarbonization Program, SAC corporate members will be required to commit and set Science Based Targets (SBTs) from 2023.

The SAC said every stakeholder in the value chain has a role to play in taking concrete action to reduce GHG emissions.

“From here, the SAC will support members to commit and set SBTs, followed by scaling high impact solutions needed to achieve them collectively.”

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Six most impactful areas have been identified through which members can collectively drive change and create sustainable impact:

  • Maximising material efficiency: reducing the amount of fibre and materials that go to waste through design, material usage and manufacturing methodology
  • Scaling sustainable materials and practices: increasing the use of more sustainable materials and practices
  • Accelerating the development of innovative materials: increasing investment in next-generation materials, including textile recycling and bio-based materials
  • Proliferating energy efficiency: making energy efficiency a priority across all manufacturing facilities
  • Eliminating coal in manufacturing: replacing coal with renewable energy in all manufacturing facilities
  • Shifting to 100% renewable electricity: deploying renewable energy solutions

Joyce Tsoi, director of collective action programs at the SAC, said: “Right now, the fashion industry is not on track to hit net zero by 2050. But change is happening. We need to be accelerating actions now, we are working alongside with our members collaboratively on committing and setting science-based targets in line with latest climate science which provides a clearly defined pathway for reducing their emissions in their decarbonization journey, providing a space or platform where companies can put competition aside to share insights, best practices and even collaborate on shared manufacturing facilities for their supply chains.

Our position as a convener of around half the sector means that we have a unique opportunity to leverage and influence the scale and impact of our community to get the industry back on track and deliver emissions reduction in line with science-based targets, to prevent the worst impacts of climate change.

“Through the Decarbonization Program, we are building important collective action solutions to drive large-scale systematic change required in our global supply chains which no single company can do this alone. Members are listening and learning from each other to address the most pressing and difficult issues we are all facing in different geographical regions, driving shared solutions to shared problems and making sure our targets become a reality. It’s the only way we can ensure our industry has a future.

Pascal Brun, head of sustainability at H&M added: “There’s an urgency for the industry to take collective action to solve the joint challenges we are facing. We need to work together across the whole value chain to reduce the industry’s carbon footprint.”

Delman Lee, vice chair at TAL Apparel, said: “There’s an urgency for us to tackle the current climate crisis, as a collective action coalition which represents half of the apparel, footwear and textile sector we must address environmental and social issues through collaboration and equal partnership on common grounds. We must take more actions where value chain partners should be equally engaged and motivated each other to drive urgent actions to reduce emissions as a shared objective.”

Alagesan Senniappan, sr. vice president of quality assurance / CSR / sustainable textiles at Eastman Exports, added: “Over a thousand years ago our ancestors thought and taught us biodiversity and importance of earth by a term “பகுத்துண்டு பல்லுயிர் ஓம்புதல்” meaning” Sharing Food for all life”. We evolve and stick to the DNA of our ancestors which made us implement a zero liquid discharge system over a decade ago to make water positive and our most tier 4 & 3 facilities over a quarter century using renewable wind power which makes our region geography a low climate impact region.

As a forefront step we are progressing to SBTi commitment to achieve net zero in future. As a responsible organisation we feel this is a needed step to demonstrate the organisation of the future and the ground to change is visible – with technology based on the availability and other needed resources to implement our road map. We are committed to keep earth for all lives and future generations. We are the generation that can only act for our mother earth.”

Last month, at an in-person meeting held in Singapore, the SAC urged industry collaboration on tackling “systemic sustainability and human rights issues” as the climate crisis gathers momentum.