Biodiversity in fashion

Fashion has a huge impact on nature. Our experts can help you integrate SBTN targets (Science-Based Targets for Nature) into your growth, create a sustainable supply chain, and sow a greener future.

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Our Fashion Clients

Services styled around our fashion clients

Our collaborative approach to biodiversity means that we can work with you to identify areas of improvement, strategise for future growth, or help you meet fashion legislation requirements that would otherwise prove costly and time-consuming.

We do this by offering you a variety of services that create sustainable fashion supply chains and help you understand the biodiversity frameworks that align with your brand:

Biodiversity Framework Consultancy

Need help understanding how the Task Force on Nature-Related Financial Disclosure (TNFD) Framework aligns with your fashion brand? Or how EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) requirements can be met by the fashion industry? Our specialists are here to help.

Corporate Biodiversity Strategies

No matter the size or scale of your fashion brand, we can work with you as a dedicated fashion sustainability consultant to develop future-proofed strategies around biodiversity, aligning your brand with evolving regulations and consumer expectations.

How does the fashion industry impact biodiversity?

The fashion industry simply wouldn’t exist without biodiversity. From the raw materials needed to manufacture clothes to the patterns and styles that are inspired by the diversity of the natural world, fashion and biodiversity must coexist.

But we are in a biodiversity crisis, and fashion brands like yours need help to make sure that biodiversity is at the forefront of your strategy. Experts predicted in 2020 that there would only be 60 remaining harvests if our current farming methods aren’t changed – the need for biodiversity support has never been more pressing.

Cotton production is responsible for 16% of all insecticides.

By 2030, the fashion industry is projected to use 35% more land than it already does.

An estimated 35% of microplastics in the ocean originate from synthetic microfiber release.

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