Sustainable & Circular Fashion — 2026-05-18
This week, the fashion industry's biggest sustainability conversation unfolded at the Global Fashion Summit, where the rhetoric shifted from idealism to business pragmatism — a move critics say may be leaving workers behind. Meanwhile, a fresh challenge to the resale market's environmental halo emerged as a new analysis spotlights eBay's resurgence as a fashion resale platform, and Vinted faces scrutiny over whether it fuels over-consumption rather than curing it. The industry signals that sustainability is maturing from aspiration to accountability.
Sustainable & Circular Fashion — 2026-05-18
This Week's Top Stories
Fashion's "Resilient" Future: Is Sustainability Becoming a Business Buzzword?
This year's Global Fashion Summit made a noticeable pivot — away from the values-driven environmental rhetoric of previous years and toward reframing sustainability as a core business competency. WWD reports that the summit's language around climate and worker welfare shifted toward economic resilience frameworks, raising concern among advocates that the industry is sanitising its sustainability commitments. The change in framing matters because it determines which stakeholders are centered and what trade-offs are treated as acceptable. If sustainability becomes purely a financial risk-management story, the most vulnerable people in supply chains risk being deprioritised once again.

Vinted Was the Antidote to Fast Fashion — Now It May Be the Problem
A new opinion piece in The Independent (published 1 day ago) challenges the premise that resale apps like Vinted are inherently sustainable. The author argues that, far from encouraging restraint, platforms like Vinted can trigger compulsive buying behaviour: the ease of listing and buying secondhand removes guilt while enabling the same volume of overconsumption. The piece lands amid growing research scrutiny on whether secondhand markets actually reduce net clothing production or simply add a new consumption layer on top of it. For brands and investors betting on resale as their ESG story, this is a significant reputational and strategic risk.

eBay's Fashion Revival: The Resale OG Wins Back Shoppers
Business Insider reports (published 2 days ago) that eBay has successfully recaptured fashion shoppers through strategic partnerships, improved user experience, and showing up at key cultural moments. Once seen as the clunky ancestor of sleek platforms like Depop and Vinted, eBay has repositioned itself in the secondhand fashion space through curation and cultural credibility. For the circular economy, eBay's resurgence matters: it's one of the largest global marketplaces and its renewed investment in fashion resale could bring millions more garments into a secondary market. The question is whether volume-driven resale at eBay's scale translates to meaningful displacement of new clothing production.
Resale & Secondhand Market
The resale sector continues its structural expansion, though the week's coverage adds important nuance about whether growth equals sustainability impact.
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Vinted faces new scrutiny. The Independent's analysis (published May 17) argues the platform may be creating new compulsive purchasing habits rather than replacing virgin fashion purchases — a "greenwashing by proxy" concern that could inform future EU platform regulation.
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eBay reclaims fashion credibility. After years of ceding ground to Instagram-native resale apps, eBay's fashion category is booming again. Business Insider (May 16) credits savvy brand partnerships and cultural presence — not just price — for the turnaround. The platform's scale means even small increases in fashion GMV represent enormous volumes of secondhand clothing.
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FashionUnited highlights carbon accounting challenge. In updates published within the past two weeks, FashionUnited's sustainability hub notes that while the industry is moving from footprint reduction toward treating "carbon as a resource," proving actual environmental impact remains the sector's central unresolved challenge. Fashion for Good has also launched a new Mass Balance Demonstrator to help brands track recycled content through complex supply chains.
Brand Spotlight
Fashion for Good — Mass Balance Demonstrator
- What they're doing: Fashion for Good has launched what it calls a Mass Balance Demonstrator — a collaborative tool designed to track and verify recycled content as it moves through fashion supply chains, addressing a core credibility gap in sustainability claims.
- Why it stands out: Unlike most brand-led sustainability initiatives, this is an industry infrastructure play: it tackles the systemic problem of proving recycled content claims at scale, which matters for both consumer trust and incoming EU regulation requiring recycled fibre percentages by 2030. It is not a product launch or a marketing campaign — it is supply chain plumbing.
- Impact: If widely adopted, this tool could provide the traceable data backbone that the EU's Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) and digital product passport requirements will demand from brands. Without credible chain-of-custody data, recycled content claims are unverifiable.
Materials & Innovation
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EU recycled content mandate on track for 2030. The European Environment Agency's analysis confirms that the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) targets a significant share of EU textiles containing recycled fibres by 2030, with mandatory recycled content requirements designed to boost market adoption of secondary fibres. While this data predates our coverage window, the regulatory trajectory is hardening in real time and directly shapes where brands are investing in material innovation now.
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EU ban on destroying unsold clothing advances. Reported in February 2026, the EU's binding ban on destroying unsold apparel and footwear is moving toward a mandatory disclosure framework starting in 2027. This reshapes inventory strategy across the industry — brands can no longer quietly incinerate or landfill overstock, and ESG disclosure requirements will make it visible when they do. The downstream effect is likely to accelerate brand-owned resale, rental, and outlet programs as legitimate inventory clearance alternatives.
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Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) goes global. As of early 2026, EPR frameworks for textiles are now operative or advancing in the EU, France, and several US states, according to Fabriclore's 2026 industry overview. These laws require brands to fund collection and recycling infrastructure, creating financial incentives — and penalties — that no voluntary commitment ever could. The Ellen MacArthur Foundation has described EPR as "necessary for a circular economy for textiles."
What to Watch
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EU unsold goods disclosure (2027 deadline approaching): Brands have roughly 18 months to build internal tracking systems that comply with the EU's mandatory disclosure framework on unsold clothing destruction. Early movers are already piloting brand-owned resale channels.
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Digital Product Passport rollout: The EU's ESPR Delegated Act for textiles is expected to include requirements for "sustainably sourced renewable materials" (SSRM) — a distinct new category that will sit alongside recycled content requirements. Cascale is actively lobbying for strong definitions before the delegated act is finalised.
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Resale platforms and over-consumption debate: The question raised this week by The Independent — whether apps like Vinted accelerate rather than replace fashion consumption — is gaining traction with policymakers. Watch for whether this enters EPR or ecodesign regulatory discussions in Brussels.
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Mass Balance tools for recycled content: Fashion for Good's new demonstrator is worth tracking as a bellwether for whether industry can self-organise on supply chain transparency before regulators mandate it.
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