The death of fast fashion and the birth of sustainable fashion
FESPA’s Online Marketing Manager, Kelley-Ann Young Kong speaks to Bianca Seidel Seidel from Bianca Seidel Consulting about the need for fast fashion to die and be replaced by durable, sustainable fashion
Bianca emphasizes the importance of system change and how this will impact the globalised textile manufacturing industry.
Please visit Sustainability Spotlight to discover more online content where we speak to industry experts about Sustainability where you can discover business opportunities to reduce, reuse and recycle materials and improve your knowledge.
For more information about Clare Taylor Consulting and her services visit here: http://www.clare-taylor-consulting.co.uk/
Topics
Recent news
How to tackle polyester pollution with Matter Industries and Paradise Textiles
In this podcast Debbie McKeegan speaks to Adam Root, founder of Matter Industries and his innovation Regen™, a capture technology to remove microfibres from the textile manufacturing process for the benefit of human and environmental health. We also meet Lewis Shuler of Paradise Textiles who are collaborating on research and the application of Matter’s technology for textile manufacturing.
How reducing waste can lower costs and improve profitability for your business
Nessan Cleary explains how businesses can increase their profit by being more sustainable by reducing energy consumption, improving recycling and most importantly motivating staff to implement these new policies.
What questions should you ask new sustainability stakeholders?
Steve Lister discusses upcoming sustainability stakeholders for 2024 and discover vital questions to ask them. In a shifting landscape, proactive engagement is key. Learn how to align with new partners' goals and navigate evolving expectations, ensuring your organization stays at the forefront of environmental and social responsibility.
How to assess and report your environmental sustainability
Laurel Brunner discusses how ISO has now approved a new project that will suppor the industry's sustainability. The new work, ISO 19311, provides requirements for sustainability assessment reporting and the idea is to make it easier to evaluate sustainability reports, like for like.