Reconomy launches ReDress to help textile producers meet expanding international EPR regs


Reconomy launches ReDress to help textile producers meet expanding international EPR regs

Reconomy, an international circular economy specialist, has launched a tech-enabled, international service to help businesses comply with textile Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) regulations.

The service – called ReDress – will help businesses understand and deal with their global obligations and the legislative timescales of different EPR schemes as well as the financial impact and reporting requirements stemming from these regulations. From a sustainability perspective, they will also be better placed to redress the environmental impact of fashion.

The ReDress solution combines horizon scanning, data management, environmental compliance, omnichannel take-back and repair services. ReDress leans on Reconomy’s specialist international capabilities throughout the resource cycle to provide a one-stop-shop service for the complex questions posed by textiles EPR.

EPR is an environmental policy determining the responsibilities producers (including manufacturers, importers, brand owners and retailers) have at the post-consumer stage of a product’s lifecycle. EPR therefore supports positive environmental change via incentives and fees.

In March 2024, the European Parliament passed the first stage of amendments to the Waste Framework Directive meaning EPR for textiles will soon be mandatory across EU member states.

Global implementation of these schemes is accelerating as textile production is highly resource-intensive with low recycling rates. The industry uses 93 billion cubic metres of water a year, is the third highest user of water and land, and the fourth most carbon intensive. Less than 1 per cent of textiles worldwide are recycled into new products.

This month, Reconomy also set up its new Producer Responsibility Organisation (PRO) in Italy for membership. This is a collective system which, as soon as the legislation comes into force, will have the authority to fulfil all obligations under the EPR and other European textile directives on behalf of producers.

In the meantime, membership will be on a voluntary basis, and the PRO will drive awareness across all supply chain stakeholders around the correct management of textile products within the context of increasing circularity in order for them to be prepared to meet future requirements.

Reconomy’s ‘Re-use’ loop is already trusted to manage over 96 million product returns a year for major fashion and homewares brands and has demonstrated a 20% reduction in its customers’ carbon intensity since 2020.

In its ‘Comply’ loop, Reconomy submits over 10,000 data declarations every year from 23 regional hubs servicing over 80 countries with more than 30 dedicated data specialists. Reconomy has seen significant recent growth, expanding to operate across more than 80 countries, with more than 4,000 colleagues and over 10,000 customers.

Claire Webb, executive chair of Reconomy’s Re-use division, said: “As the international compliance landscape becomes increasingly complex, businesses can derive significant strategic benefits from single-provider, end-to-end solutions to manage this process. Textiles EPR is coming around the corner and as the responsibility shifts, there are serious cost implications as well as risks for businesses that do not have visibility of what will shortly be required of them. Working with a provider like Reconomy gives businesses an efficient and compliant international operation with a holistic view of their sustainability objectives and obligations.”

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