Ellen MacArthur Foundation: Circular Business Models Offer $700 Billion Opportunity For Fashion Industry

LONDON — November 23, 2021 — Circular business models, in sectors such as rental and resale, have the potential to claim 23 percent of the global fashion market by 2030 and grasp a $700 billion opportunity, new research from the Ellen MacArthur Foundation has found.

在其最新的报告中,圆形的商业模式:再保险defining growth for a thriving fashion industry, the Foundation has shown how circular business models offer significant potential for greater revenue, while cutting the volume of new clothing and accessories produced.

Four examples of circular business models — rental, resale, repair, and remaking — represent a $73 billion market. These models are expected to continue growing as customers become increasingly motivated by affordability, convenience, and environmental awareness.

The Foundation warned however, that currently, these models do not always lead to environmental benefits, particularly, if they are seen purely as ‘add-ons’ to a traditional wasteful model as opposed to central to all business activities. For example, incentivising product take-back for resale, remaking or recycling by offering vouchers for new products may fuel more production. Rental models that offer clothes not designed to withstand many wears and cleaning cycles increase the chances of that model being economically and environmentally unviable. Ultimately, if not designed to be part of the system in which it sits, clothing will end up in landfill after very few uses.

To maximize the positive outcomes of circular business models and realize their full potential for better economic growth and environmental impacts the Foundation has recommended four key actions.

Rethink performance indicators, customer incentives, and customer experiences: Shifting to a business model based on increasing the use of products, rather than producing and selling more products, requires the business to rethink how it measures success, and to encourage its customers to opt for its circular offering through carefully designed incentives and enhanced customer experiences.

Design products that can be used more and for longer: To maximize the economic and environmental potential of circular business models, products need to be designed and made to be physically durable, emotionally durable, and able to be remade and recycled at the end of their use.

Co-create supply networks able to circulate products locally as well as globally: To successfully keep products in circulation, fashion supply chains, currently designed for a predictable one-way flow of products, need to be transformed into supply networks capable of circulating products locally and globally, through collaboration and the use of digital technologies.

Scale a wider range of circular business models: Scaling a variety of circular business models that generate revenue without producing new products can increase the overall economic and environmental opportunity long term.

Marilyn Martinez, fashion initiative project manager at the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, said: “Not only do circular business models have massive potential to become mainstream, they provide new and better growth for the fashion industry. Clothing production doubled between 2000 and 2015, while the time we use clothes fell by more than a third. Circular business models can help turn this around and create a thriving industry that takes a lead on tackling global challenges such as climate change and biodiversity loss.”

Posted November 23, 2021

Source: Ellen MacArthur Foundation