👕Slow fashion starts with extended producer responsibility. Here’s what this means:
Last month, the revision of the Waste Framework Directive entered into force, introducing 🆕 rules for extended producer responsibility (EPR) for textiles.
What’s next?
1️⃣ Mandatory schemes for textile and footwear products: All Member States are required to establish their own EPR scheme for textiles and footwear. Under such schemes, textile and footwear producers will pay a fee for each product they place on the market.
2️⃣ This fee will finance collection schemes and the management of the collected textiles, providing for their re-use, preparing for re-use, recycling and disposal.
3️⃣ New rules for the management of used textiles and textile waste: EU countries will have to ensure that separately collected textiles undergo sorting operations preventing waste from being falsely labelled and exported as reusable.
Material supply chains showed renewed complexity as Europe delayed enforcement of deforestation rules, affecting traceable sourcing of mass-timber and the embodied carbon in materials that underpin sustainable building practices. The deferral reinforces the need for lifecycle assessment and end-of-life reuse in construction, ensuring renewable building materials meet the standards of environmental product declarations (EPDs). Clients now prioritise deforestation-free, rights-respecting, low embodied carbon materials supported by circular economy in construction frameworks and robust whole life carbon assessments.
Rising energy prices across North America increase attention on energy-efficient buildings, deep retrofit strategies and life cycle cost optimisation. Developers are integrating eco-design for buildings that enhance operational performance while lowering the carbon footprint of construction. Water resilience is shaping sustainable building design in the UK, with drought prediction and reuse systems becoming part of life cycle thinking in construction and sustainable urban development.
The transition demands resource efficiency in construction and carbon neutral construction models that directly address the environmental impact of construction. Developers and contractors must commit to building lifecycle performance monitoring, circular construction strategies and sustainable material specification aligned with BREEAM v7 and similar frameworks. Environmental sustainability in construction now depends on design teams treating embodied carbon and whole life carbon as defining metrics for low-impact construction and durable, eco-friendly assets.
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