EXCLUSIVE: Bestseller, Gap Inc., H&M Group and Mango Join Forces on Renewable Energy Finance Initiative

PARIS – High street retailers Bestseller, H&M Group, Gap Inc. and Mango have joined forces to back a new program called The Future Supplier Initiative, a collective financing model to help garment manufacturing, spinning and knitting facilities in Bangladesh transition to renewable energy.

The four fast fashion brands will back loans and directly fund factory upgrades under a de-risking model, with the support of Singapore-based DBS Bank and Bain Capital’s risk consultancy Guidehouse. The Fashion Pact and Apparel Impact Institute are also supporting the initiative.

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“This initiative is really what we see as being the next big thing that our industry needs. It needs collaboration across companies, brands and businesses,” Bestseller chief executive officer Anders Holch Povlsen told WWD. “We all know that the big challenges lie deep within our supply chain. That’s where we have the [biggest] footprint today, and this is where we need to work.”

The Fashion Industry Charter for Climate Action estimates that 99 percent of total fashion brand emissions occur at the earlier levels of the supply chain. The brands’ new financing initiative looks to share the risks with Tier 1 and 2 facilities, or those at the raw material production, dyeing and finishing and manufacturing level.

The initiative will “bridge the investment gap” for these suppliers, support their transition from coal to renewable energy and allow them to adopt new technologies and processes.

Because factories often produce for more than one brand, the general opacity of supply chains has proven to be a challenge — and a catalyst for the “brand agnostic” group effort, said Povlsen.

“No single company can really push this and now we hope that by teaming up, by having bigger volumes, by touching some of the same suppliers deeper in the supply chain, we hope that we can get [suppliers] to make the investments that we feel are needed,” he said.

The initiative will start in Bangladesh. The apparel industry accounts for about 28 percent of that country’s GDP, and it has been widely impacted by climate change with heat waves and flooding. The initiative hopes to expand to other key apparel manufacturing countries including Vietnam, India, China, Italy and Turkey in the future.

The Bestseller executive emphasized that while companies have tried to make changes in their Scope 1-owned emissions, such as direct energy use, the bulk of greenhouse gas emissions take place earlier in the production process and not on the selling floor. The root of the problem is that many apparel factories still run on fossil fuels.