The car industry realised the world was changing,
clean technology was happening and it needed to embrace a new way of operating.
Industry experts argue the fashion sector is at a similar crossroads in terms
of tackling sustainability.
October 6, 2023
The fashion
industry has considered ‘what’ it needs to do to become sustainable and it’s
now time to move towards the ‘how’ and make it happen, argues Yuly
Fuentes-Medel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Program Director for
Textiles, Climate Grand Challenges.
During the Global Fashion
Summit session titled ‘Ambition to Action’ she shares how MIT helped the auto
industry disrupt itself with the electric vehicle. She notes the whole system
and its infrastructure had to change from the storage of batteries to where
cars can be plugged in.
Federica Marchionni, CEO of
non-profit Global Fashion Agenda agrees and says she’s dreaming about the
fashion industry making its sustainability transformation a reality.
However, Fuentes-Medel notes
the key question now is how to create action. She talks about the OODA
loop (observe, orient, decide, act), but admits humans are wired to be
scared of taking action. So, she says when you really want to do something, you
‘really’ need to want it and you also need to be accountable for it. After
this, she says you need to want to repeat the action and eventually you won’t
notice you’re doing it.
She states the people in the
fashion industry right now are at the point of making that all-important
decision to act.
But, Fuentes-Medel is keen to
call out the overused phrase “systemic change,” which is often quoted alongside
fashion sustainability.
She argues nobody knows what
it is so suggests considering it in relation to the airline industry. In
airports all airlines work together and the airport is an invisible system.
Plus, consumers are not expected to pay a premium for air traffic control or
safety while travelling – it’s all taken as a given.
Similarly, she says the
fashion industry has an opportunity to not make sustainability premium:
“Fashion has the opportunity today to really identify the moments of
pre-competitive collaboration that will allow it to really be an example.”
Fuentes-Medel has dedicated
her life to the fashion industry and explains the reason she keeps working in
it is because it’s fundamentally about building an identity of who we are as
human beings.
Plus, she says the fashion
industry will change what is going to happen to this planet in the next
century.
Marchionni, who is keen to
highlight Global Fashion Agenda is celebrating its 15th anniversary in 2024,
adds: “We will take that opportunity to keep accelerating action and to make
sure that it’s not a celebration, without a reminder on accountability and action
by mobilising, educating and inspiring.”
She continues: “We have a
choice to make – either we are part of the problem, or we are part of the
solution.”