Episode Details
Back to EpisodesDesigning for the Future: Circular Strategies Reshaping Fashion and Textiles
Description
The fashion and textiles industry accounts for up to 10% of global greenhouse gas emissions, consumes 93 billion cubic meters of water annually, and generates 92 million tons of waste each year — yet only 1% of textiles are recycled back into new products. In this episode, we sit down with three leading experts to unpack one of the most resource-intensive industries on the planet and explore what a genuinely circular textiles sector could look like.
We're joined by Mark Sumner, Head of Textiles at WRAP; Sarah Morley, Strategic Engagement Manager at WRAP Americas; and Linda Breggin, Senior Attorney at the Environmental Law Institute. Together, we trace the full lifecycle of a garment from field to landfill, examine fast fashion as a consumer behavior rather than just a retail phenomenon, and explore how circular design, durability standards, voluntary industry agreements, and policy intervention are beginning to reshape the system.
Whether you're working in sustainability, environmental policy, waste reduction, or supply chain management, this episode offers both the big-picture framework and the on-the-ground insights you need to understand where the textiles industry is headed — and what it will take to get there. See WRAP's website for more information.
- Introduction: The Environmental Footprint of the Fashion and Textiles Industry (02:37)
- Lifecycle of a Garment: Hotspots, Impacts, and Intervention Points (03:47)
- Circular Design in Practice: The Pillars of a More Sustainable Textiles Industry (11:05)
- Changing Consumer Behavior (21:34)
- The UK Textiles Pact and the Durability Accelerator: Industry Collaboration in Action (29:49)
- WRAP's US Expansion: Landscape Review, Gaps, and the Road Ahead (45:14)
- The Role of State and Local Governments (48:33)
- Concluding Thoughts (54:43)