👕Slow fashion starts with extended producer responsibility. Here’s what...

EU Environment and Planet 6 months ago

👕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.

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 3 hours ago



Urban development is entering a transformation defined by measurable sustainability metrics rather than aspirational targets. Cities are adopting climate‑sensitive planning and sustainable building design that minimise energy use through form, materials and orientation. This shift aligns with environmental sustainability in construction and growing regulation around the carbon footprint of construction. Green infrastructure, vegetation and renewable building materials are being treated as core components of modern planning, establishing a foundation for eco‑friendly construction that directly contributes to net zero carbon goals.

Developers are implementing Whole Life Carbon Assessment frameworks to evaluate emissions across every project stage, from material sourcing to end‑of‑life reuse in construction. This marks a decisive move toward Whole Life Carbon accountability and Life Cycle Cost transparency. Attention to embodied carbon in materials has intensified as research converts into practice, prompting low carbon design strategies and renewable material substitution across supply chains. Lifecycle assessment and life cycle thinking in construction are no longer academic exercises but commercial tools for carbon footprint reduction and improved building lifecycle performance.

Digital innovation in procurement is enabling Circular Economy in construction models that support resource efficiency, circular construction strategies and low embodied carbon materials. Firms integrating BREEAM and forthcoming BREEAM v7 standards demonstrate how measurable sustainable building practices create long‑term value while decarbonising the built environment. Policy frameworks targeting net zero whole life carbon and carbon neutral construction now influence investment decisions across both private and public sectors.

The convergence of regulation, consumer demand and corporate responsibility signals that sustainable construction has become an operational standard. The sector’s competitive advantage increasingly depends on measurable sustainability credentials, from eco‑design for buildings to verified environmental product declarations (EPDs). As the industry redefines its purpose around durability, efficiency and circular economy principles, sustainable urban development emerges as the benchmark for global growth.

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