A new Circular Design Toolkit has been released by
the UK government’s Waste and Resources Action Programme (WRAP), with the aim
of assisting the textile industry in reducing the environmental impact of
textile products at the design stage.
According to WRAP, nearly 80% of the carbon footprint of a textile product is determined during its design phase. The Circular Design Toolkit serves as a comprehensive resource for the textile sector, presenting a consistent framework of circular design strategies.
This toolkit seeks to simplify
the concept of circular design, breaking it down into a manageable set of
actions and strategies that can be applied by design and product development
teams.
Developed in collaboration
with industry stakeholders through the Textiles 2030 Circular Design Working
Group, the toolkit offers case studies and examples of businesses that are
already making progress in four key circular design areas: reducing material
impacts, optimising resources, designing for longevity, and designing for
recovery.
WRAP is now calling on brands
not part of the agreement to share the toolkit with their design and product
development teams to encourage the design of textile products that can
circulate through a circular system.
The Circular Design Toolkit is
part of WRAP’s Textiles 2030 agreement, which seeks to help textile
organisations integrate circular design principles into their design and
product development processes.
The goal is to prolong the
lifespan of garments, select sustainable materials, and ensure that they are
designed for recyclability.
The Circular Design Toolkit
was made available to signatories of Textiles 2030 in February 2023, with many
of them already incorporating it into their processes.
The motivation behind this
effort is the growing global concern about the environmental impact of the
textiles industry, which has prompted governments worldwide to take action.
WRAP highlighted how the EU
Strategy for Sustainable and Circular Textiles is spearheading this movement,
with plans to introduce eco-design requirements, Extended Producer
Responsibility, eco-modulation fees, and Digital Product Passports.
The government programme
believes the Circular Design Toolkit will help brands prepare for these
impending regulations.
Catherine David, director of
behaviour change & business programmes at WRAP said: “This guide can help
brands design holistically with every stage of a product’s lifecycle in mind,
allowing them to reduce its environmental impact every step of the way. The
Circular Design Toolkit is a key deliverable on the Textiles 2030 Circularity
Roadmap which sets out what needs to happen between now and 2030 to achieve the
Textiles 2030 targets and transition to a circular economy.”
Online, catalogue and store
retailer, N Brown Group has already initiated circular design
projects and workshops using the toolkit to get a better understanding of how
it can “integrate circular design into its product lifecycle,” said Joseph
Mountain, sustainability lead at N Brown Group.
Looking ahead, Textiles 2030
plans to develop circular design training using the toolkit, focusing on
principles from the guide and involving stakeholders across the value chain,
with progress tracked through benchmark surveys.
By Just Style