Fashion for Good launches the Feedstock Assessment for Biosynthetic Innovation
Credit: Canva
18 November 2024
AMSTERDAM – Fashion for Good is excited to announce the launch of the Feedstock Assessment for Biosynthetic Innovation, an initiative in collaboration with Bestseller, On and other brands aimed at accelerating the industry’s shift towards alternatives to fossil-fuel polymers. The assessment will be conducted in partnership with industry experts, the nova-Institute.
With the growing need to phase out virgin fossil-fuel-based materials, this project will focus on identifying and assessing viable feedstock alternatives derived from bio-based and CO₂-based sources, with the goal of providing a detailed landscape of possible pathways for producing polymers from such feedstocks.
TACKLING THE PROBLEM: PHASING OUT OF VIRGIN FOSSIL FUELS
The fashion industry relies heavily on virgin fossil-fuel-based polymers, particularly synthetic polymers like PET (polyethene terephthalate), PA (polyamide), EVA (ethylene-vinyl acetate), and elastane. As of 2023, polyester alone accounted for 57% of total fibre production (Textile Exchange, Materials Market Report 2023), highlighting the industry’s reliance on virgin fossil-fuel-based materials despite the environmental concerns associated with their production.
Fossil-fuel-based polymers come at a significant environmental cost and contribute to greenhouse gas emissions, environmental pollution, and biodiversity loss, fueling the global climate crisis. The pressing need to reduce this dependence on non-renewable resources has spurred a search for more sustainable alternatives.
One promising alternative solution is the adoption of innovative biosynthetic materials. Biosynthetics offer a powerful alternative to traditional synthetic fibres, bringing both performance and technical properties that have the potential to be drop-in replacements. At the same time these alternatives could significantly contribute to reducing the industry’s environmental impact, they still require extensive environmental and technical validation.
Furthermore, many solutions are currently produced using 1st-generation feedstocks. These are raw materials that are directly derived from food crops or other biomass sources, potentially competing with food production — thus presenting additional challenges related to land use, scalability and ethical sourcing. The accurate assessment of these feedstocks’ impacts and the identification of alternatives remain major roadblocks in the path to scaling biosynthetic materials.
BIO-BASED ALTERNATIVES: ASSESSMENT & VALIDATION ARE NEEDED FOR THE INDUSTRY LANDSCAPE
The industry urgently needs validated feedstocks that are environmentally sound, technically feasible, and compliant with social and regulatory standards. Bestseller, Kering, On, Fashion for Good and nova-Institute are teaming up to address this challenge by conducting an in-depth feedstock impact assessment. This assessment will map and analyse the landscape of potential technological routes for producing sustainable polymers from both bio-based and CO₂-based feedstocks.
“Through this project, we aim to tackle one of the biggest hurdles in scaling biosynthetic materials: finding the right feedstocks,” said Katrin Ley, Managing Director of Fashion for Good. “By collaborating with nova-Institute, we are excited to have the data and insights needed to make informed decisions and push towards a more sustainable future for polymers for fibres.”
“Replacing materials made from fossil fuels with innovative renewable materials is at the heart of our sustainable material strategy. With the help of this project, we not only want to validate and critically examine our material strategy but also find out which feedstock makes the most sense from a techno-ecological perspective in the future. Collaboration with other brands from the industry, the nova-Institute and Fashion for Good in this holistic assessment is crucial for a relevant project outcome” said Philipp Engels, Product Sustainability Lead at On.
The project will focus on three key areas:
- Evaluating the environmental impact of feedstocks, with the aim of reducing the industry’s overall footprint.
- Identifying feedstocks that are scalable and compatible with current manufacturing processes.
- Ensuring all feedstocks meet the standards and certificates expected by both consumers and policymakers for ethical, social and environmentally friendly materials.
As part of this initiative, nova-Institute will conduct a comprehensive feedstock assessment to explore the most promising routes for producing polymers such as bio-PET, PA, EVA, and elastane. This will include a detailed evaluation of various feedstocks.
The project will culminate in:
- A series of presentations and collaborative workshops, where Fashion for Good partners will engage in discussions to prioritise key feedstock parameters and foster collective decision-making.
- A comprehensive feedstock assessment report, which will provide the foundation for further development of sustainable materials within the fashion industry.
- A whitepaper offering strategic recommendations for brands, innovators, and manufacturers on adopting alternative feedstocks in their supply chains, supporting the industry’s transition towards sustainable polymer use.
ABOUT FASHION FOR GOOD
Fashion for Good unites the entire fashion ecosystem, from brands, retailers, suppliers, innovators, and funders to collaborate and drive change towards a regenerative industry.
At the core, Fashion for Good enables disruptive innovators on their journey to scale, providing hands-on support, connection to capital, and access to a robust ecosystem of experts. This work brings the most powerful innovations to market faster to create decisive system change.
Through its coalition of partners, Fashion for Good designs and executes catalytic interventions and new ways of value creation that drive towards the right side of history as the new economy emerges.
All of this work is enabled through the support of founding partner Laudes Foundation, co-founder William McDonough and corporate partners, adidas, Arvind Limited, BESTSELLER, Birla Cellulose, C&A, CHANEL, Inditex, Kering, Levi Strauss & Co., Norrøna, Welspun, On, Otto Group, Paradise Textiles, Patagonia, PDS Limited, PVH Corp., Reformation, Shahi Exports, Target, Teijin Frontier, W. L. Gore & Associates, and Zalando.
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