Podcast: Australia trials voluntary textile circularity levy

Share
Share

WAKEFIELD – As an apparent global push to include extended producer responsibility (EPR) frameworks in legislation gathers pace, podcast host David Styles catches up with Claire Kneller, managing director of WRAP Asia Pacific, to discuss the Australian Government’s approach.

Kneller joins the latest episode of Ecotextile Talks as a representative of the consortium behind Seamless, an initiative aiming to convince fashion brands and retailers to voluntarily contribute four cents per garment to fund textile circularity programmes and avoid a mandatory levy being imposed by central government.

 

“Textiles is on the minister’s list. It has been for a while,” Kneller explains. “Perhaps unsurprisingly, the industry was not taking enough action. There are things happening in the industry, on an individual brand and retailer level, but by no stretch of the imagination is it enough activity.”

It was this perceived stasis that led Australia’s environment minister, Tanya Plibersek, to put the nation’s fashion companies on notice: they have 12 months to act or risk much harsher measures being imposed legally.

Success for the scheme, Kneller believes, would be 60 per cent of the industry signing up to contribute by June 2024.

“That’s actually not that many companies,” she notes. “That’s probably between 15 and 20 businesses, depending on which ones you get. So it’s not a huge number, but the market in Australia is extremely consolidated at the top end.”

While WRAP Asia Pacific’s managing director is optimistic this level of uptake can be achieved, she issues industry with the cautionary tale that failing to do so may result in a higher contribution than the four cents per garment being proposed in this preliminary voluntary phase.

“Industry has the opportunity for it to continue as an industry led scheme. Once it becomes a co-regulatory scheme, it’s quite a different setup… What currently is drafted as a four cents per garment levy might be 40 cents per garment under a regulatory scheme. Now I’m not saying it will be, but it could be because it really is out of industry’s hands.”

Subscribe to our podcasts and radio shows by following us on AppleGoogleSpotify and Amazon Music, to automatically get alerts when we launch a new Ecotextile Talks Behind the News podcast. 

 

Newsletter

Read our top news stories delivered straight to your inbox.

Share

Recommended

This Month's Magazine

Opinion
How the emerging technology of agrivoltaics can help cotton growers to lower climate impacts
Why the widespread use of hazardous chemicals poses a substantial risk to investors
Supply chain data: using the worst case scenarios is much better than using average data
Features
The EU fashion sector is in danger of reaching its climate goals eight years too late
Growing waste means the textile recycling sector faces collapse
Supply chain data: Why using the worst is better than using the average
News
Treading lightly – the material footprint of EU clothing and footwear is just 1% of the overall total

Other publications from MCL News & Media

Scroll to Top
Generic filters
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Search in excerpt
Filter by Categories
Back Issues
Uncategorized

Deprecated: str_contains(): Passing null to parameter #1 ($haystack) of type string is deprecated in /var/www/vhosts/ecotextile.com/staging.ecotextile.com/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 2476
Our free newsletter showcases the very best of our journalism, delivered to you twice a week
I agree with the Terms and conditions and the Privacy policy

Advertising
With Us

Help to support the purpose-led work of our team of journalists, international correspondents, and partners – and expose your product or service to our global readership.

Subscribe to our magazine today and receive exclusive online content

Subscribe