20 C
Lahore
Friday, November 28, 2025

Fashion for Good releases first open-source blueprint for near-net-zero textile manufacturing

Fashion for Good has launched the industry’s first publicly accessible blueprint for near-net-zero textile manufacturing, providing Tier 2 factories with five practical, costed pathways capable of reducing carbon emissions by up to 93%. Developed under the Future Forward Factory project, the blueprint directly targets one of fashion’s most carbon-intensive and technologically stagnant segments: dyeing, treatment, and finishing.

Wet processing remains one of fashion’s hardest-to-abate emissions hotspots. High dependence on steam, thermal energy, chemicals, and water—combined with thin margins and fragmented ownership—has made it difficult for factories to justify large-scale upgrades.

This blueprint provides the missing “how-to” guide: a holistic, technically validated and financially modelled playbook for change.

Created with leading partners including Laudes Foundation, H&M Foundation, Apparel Impact Institute, IDH, and Arvind Mills, the blueprint consolidates best available technologies, disruptive process innovations, and energy interventions into five product-specific pathways for cotton knits and wovens in India.

If fully implemented, factories can achieve:

  • 93% reduction in carbon emissions
  • 33% reduction in water usage
  • 41% reduction in electricity consumption

Each pathway includes: Capex requirements; Payback periods; Internal Rate of Return (IRR); Net Present Value (NPV) calculations; A comprehensive policy and incentives map; A “navigation tool” to help factories identify the most relevant decarbonisation scenario.

Based on strong industry uptake, Fashion for Good plans to expand this model to other regions, developing region-specific blueprints for diverse manufacturing contexts in South Asia and Latin America.

 

 

Related Articles

Stay Connected

11,285FansLike
394FollowersFollow
9,950SubscribersSubscribe

Latest Articles