Abstract

Sustainability has been recognized as a major concern globally since the Brudtland Report, in 1987, and further reinforced in 2015 by the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UNSDG) 2030. This paper reviews the methodologies and criteria of sustainability applied to fashion products, regarding products’ environmental footprint (environmental life cycle assessment/analysis; e-LCA), the social issues (including the social life cycle assessment/analysis; s-LCA) and the transparency in reporting sustainability. In our review we seek KPIs (key performance indicators) that allow classification of a pair of shoes or a piece of cloth on a scale from A to E, i.e., products can be compared with a benchmark and classified accordingly with a simple labelling scheme, which is easily understandable by the consumers. This approach is similar to those used to classify electrical appliances, housing energy consumption for thermal comfort, food Nutri-Scores, CO2 levels of road vehicles, and tire performance. In this review we aim to identify the initiatives and measures being put into practice by the top global fashion brands. We found that, despite the existence of GRI (global sustainability reporting initiative) standard reporting, most companies follow their own methods or others created within the industry rather than those created in the scientific community. Examples include the Higg index, the Transparency Index, and the Social Codes of Conduct (CoC). In this study, we conducted an extensive review of certification schemes and labels already applied to fashion products, and identified a multitude of labels and lack of harmonization in communicating sustainability. As result, we compiled a summary table of all criteria, methodologies, and possible KPIs that can be considered the basis for a benchmark and score of a fashion product. This topic is crucial to avoid “green washing” and a lack of transparency for the buyer’s community, i.e., business to consumer (B2C), and for the business community, i.e., business to business (B2B) relationships, which comprise a complex multi-layer supply chain of suppliers and sub-suppliers. The UNSDG 2030 “Responsible Consumption and Production” frames these efforts to facilitate standardization of KPIs in terms of structure, criteria, and their measurement. The most common KPI is environmental global warming impact (expressed as CO2eq) based on life cycle assessment/analysis (LCA) principles (established in 2000), which provide an appropriate base to monitor and benchmark products. However, in our innovative review of t-shirt e-LCA, we identified a wide range of e-LCA assumptions, relating to different boundaries, allocations, functional units, and impact categories, which represent a major challenge in benchmarking.

Highlights

  • The Brudtland Report [1] defines sustainable development as “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”

  • Existing key performance indicators (KPIs) are generally consistent with e-life cycle assessment (LCA) impact categories (1 to 20 impact categories related to air degradation, water degradation, and the Earth’s materials or land depletion; see Table S1 of the Supplementary Material)

  • Up to 20 impact categories related to air, ecosystems, and human health exist for measurement and monitoring

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Summary

Introduction

The Brudtland Report [1] defines sustainable development as “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”. Relates to the collateral effects of mass production at lower cost, which is usually displaced to developing countries with poor working conditions; Objective 13 (SDG13), Climate Action, aims to reduce all activities’ CO2eq emissions and global warming potential, which relates to all phases of the fashion product supply chain, including buildings’ energy efficiency; Objective 12 (SDG 12), Responsible Consumption and Production, refers to eco-friendly production methods and reducing the amount of waste in the context of the circular economy while avoiding depletion of the Earth’s materials. The term “fast fashion” relates to inexpensive clothing produced rapidly by mass-market retailers in response to the latest trends, with a high rate of new products in stores and more frequent purchasing and disposal by consumers [5]

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