| Circular Economy, Digital Product Passports, Extended Producer Responsibility

Circular Economy in Fashion: Building scalable systems to reduce textile waste

The global fashion industry is one of the world’s largest and most influential sectors. Valued at more than $1.7 trillion, it employs millions of people and produces over 100 billion garments every year. According to Dana Thomasbook Fashionopolis, it also employs one out of every six people worldwide, producing over 100 billion garments each yearYet this scale comes with significant environmental challenges.

Across Europe alone, 12.6 million tonnes of textile waste are generated each year, with clothing and footwear accounting for 5.2 million tonnes (European Environment Agency). Globally, less than 1% of textiles are recycled into new garments (Ellen MacArthur), meaning the vast majority of materials used in fashion are lost after a short lifecycle.

These figures highlight a systemic issue: the fashion industry still operates largely on a linear model of take, make, dispose.

To address this, businesses, policymakers and supply chains are increasingly turning to the circular economy in fashion. Unlike circular fashion, which focuses on product-level strategies such as reuse and repair, the circular economy in fashion takes a system-wide approach, transforming how materials flow across design, production, consumption and recovery.

In this piece, we explore how circular systems work in fashion, the role of policy and infrastructure, and what it will take to scale circularity across the industry.

What is the circular economy in fashion?

The circular economy in fashion applies circular principles across the entire textile value chain.

Rather than treating clothing as disposable, it focuses on keeping materials in use for as long as possible, recovering value at end-of-life, and reducing reliance on virgin resources.

In practice, this means:

  • Designing products for durability and recyclability
  • Using recycled or renewable materials
  • Extending product lifecycles through reuse, repair and resale
  • Recovering fibres through recycling and remanufacturing

Circular fashion vs circular economy in fashion

While often used interchangeably, there is an important distinction.

Circular fashion focuses on products and consumer behaviour (e.g. resale, repair, sustainable design)

Circular economy in fashion focuses on systems, including infrastructure, regulation, supply chains and data

If you’re new to the concept, start with our guide to what is circular fashion.

Why the fashion industry needs a circular economy

The environmental and economic pressures facing fashion are intensifying.

Rising textile waste

  • EU textile waste: 12.6 million tonnes annually (European Commission)
  • UK textile waste: 1.45 million tonnes (Wrap)
  • 759,000 tonnes of UK textiles lost to landfill or incineration (Wrap)

Low recycling rates

Less than 1% of textiles are recycled into new garments (Textiles Exchange)

Less than 8% of fibres come from recycled sources (Textiles Exchange)

The circularity gap

Despite growing awareness, production continues to outpace recovery systems.

Large volumes of textiles are:

  • exported to the Global South
  • downcycled into low-value uses
  • or lost entirely through disposal

This gap between production and recovery highlights the need for system-level change, not just product-level improvements. The world’s current circularity gap sits at 6.9% (Circularity Gap Report, 2025), and changing how we manage textile waste could impact this significantly.

How circular systems work in fashion supply chains

Transitioning to a circular economy requires rethinking the entire lifecycle of clothing.

Design and material selection

Circularity starts at the design stage.

Decisions around materials, construction and recyclability, determine whether products can be recovered at end-of-life.

As James Beard, our Director of Circular Innovation at Reconomy, explains:

“The first step in a circular solution is design. Choices made at the concept stage are where circularity efforts live or die.”

Production and resource efficiency

Manufacturers must now integrate:

  • recycled inputs
  • waste reduction processes
  • closed-loop production systems

Reverse logistics and recovery

Circular systems depend on effective recovery infrastructure.

This includes:

  • take-back schemes
  • collection networks
  • sorting facilities
  • recycling technologies
  • resale and refurbishment channels

Without these systems, valuable materials are lost.

Reconomy supports these processes through reverse logistics, returns management and recycling solutions that enable circular supply chains at scale.

Circular business models transforming fashion

Circularity is not only about materials, it is also about how products are used.

Resale and recommerce

Second-hand marketplaces extend product lifecycles and reduce demand for new production.

Rental models

Rental increases utilisation rates by allowing multiple users per garment.

Repair and refurbishment

Repair services encourage longer use and reduce disposal rates.

Take-back schemes

Brands collect used garments for reuse, resale or recycling.

While these models are growing, many remain difficult to scale without supporting infrastructure and policy frameworks.

The role of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) in fashion

One of the most significant drivers of the circular economy in fashion is Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR).

EPR shifts responsibility onto producers for the full lifecycle of their products.

What EPR means for fashion brands

  • Funding textile collection and recycling systems
  • Designing products with end-of-life in mind
  • Increasing transparency and reporting

EU textile regulations

The EU is introducing mandatory textile EPR schemes, requiring all member states to establish systems for textile waste collection and management.

Why EPR is critical

EPR enables circularity by:

  • funding infrastructure
  • incentivising sustainable design
  • improving recycling rates
  • aligning environmental and commercial outcomes

Infrastructure and technology enabling circular fashion

Scaling circular systems requires significant investment in infrastructure and innovation.

Key challenges

  • Limited global recycling capacity
  • Fragmented supply chains
  • Lack of data and traceability

 

Emerging solutions

Digital product passports

Provide detailed information about materials and recyclability.

Advanced textile recycling

New fibre-to-fibre technologies allow old garments to become new fibres.

Data-driven lifecycle management

Digital platforms track product journeys and optimise recovery.

These innovations are essential for enabling closed-loop systems.

Hear from industry experts on building circular textile systems

Understanding how to scale the circular economy in fashion requires insight from across the value chain, from recyclers and policymakers to brands and compliance specialists.

In the first episode of our podcast, Circular Soundbites, we explore these challenges in more detail.

Our first series, Thread Talks, focuses on the future of textiles and fashion. In Episode 1, we’re joined by Alan Wheeler, Chief Executive of the Textile Recycling Association (UK), to discuss what it will take to build a truly circular textile system.

Topics covered include:

  • Textile recycling today
  • Upcoming Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) regulation
  • Infrastructure challenges
  • Global markets for used textiles

For businesses navigating circularity, regulation and resource recovery, it offers practical insight into how the system is evolving, and what needs to happen next.

Microplastics and synthetic fibres: a growing challenge

One of the most complex issues linked to the circular economy in fashion is microplastic pollution.

Synthetic fibres such as polyester, nylon and acrylic shed microfibres during washing, contributing to ocean pollution.

Circular solutions include:

  • developing low-shedding materials
  • improving filtration technologies
  • reducing reliance on synthetic fibres

Addressing microplastics requires both material innovation and systemic change.

Measuring circularity in fashion

For businesses, tracking progress is essential.

Key circular metrics include:

  • Recycled material content
  • Product lifespan (number of wears)
  • Textile collection and recycling rates
  • Participation in repair and resale schemes
  • Carbon and water savings

Measuring these indicators helps organisations:

  • demonstrate progress
  • identify inefficiencies
  • improve decision-making

Barriers to scaling the circular economy in fashion

Despite progress, several barriers remain:

  • Complex global supply chains
  • Limited recycling infrastructure
  • High cost of innovation
  • Consumer behaviour and fast fashion demand
  • Lack of standardised data

Overcoming these challenges requires collaboration across industries.

Building circular fashion supply chains

Achieving circularity requires alignment across the entire value chain.

Key components include:

  • sustainable material sourcing
  • circular product design
  • reverse logistics systems
  • recycling infrastructure
  • data transparency

Organisations that integrate these elements can significantly reduce waste while improving efficiency.

The commercial opportunity of circular fashion

Circularity is not just an environmental necessity; it is a business opportunity.

According to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, circular fashion could unlock a $560 billion global opportunity.

Benefits include:

  • reduced material costs
  • improved supply chain resilience
  • new revenue streams (resale, repair)
  • stronger customer loyalty

Circularity enables businesses to combine sustainability with long-term growth.

The future of the circular economy in fashion

The transition is accelerating, driven by:

Regulation

EPR and sustainability policies are reshaping the industry.

Technology

Advances in recycling and data are enabling scalability.

Collaboration

Partnerships across the value chain are becoming essential.

Consumer expectations

Demand for sustainable products continues to rise.

Together, these forces are pushing the industry toward a more circular future.

Key takeaways

The circular economy in fashion represents a fundamental shift from linear production to system-wide resource optimisation.

For businesses, this means:

  • embedding circularity into design and supply chains
  • preparing for evolving regulations
  • investing in infrastructure and data
  • adopting new business models

Closing the gap between today’s linear systems and a circular future will require coordinated action, but it also presents a significant opportunity for innovation and growth.

Let’s make fashion more circular

Reconomy works with global organisations to enable circular supply chains, support textile recycling, and navigate evolving environmental regulations.

Learn more about how we help businesses transition to a circular economy and prepare for textile EPR.

Reconomy’s offering

  • Horizon scanning: Reconomy’s international compliance team keeps clients informed on environmental legislation and insights to mitigate risk within an evolving global legislative landscape.
  • Data management: Reconomy pairs high-quality data management with innovative tools to make compliance reporting easier and more efficient. Insights into the economic and reporting demands of EPR schemes equip companies with the knowledge and data to navigate the new landscape effectively.
  • Environmental compliance: Supporting clients through the process, Reconomy simplifies compliance with its global Producer Responsibility Organisation (PRO) operation.
  • Pre-compliance and post-compliance take-back programmes: Legislation likely includes mandatory take-back programs. Reconomy provides a complete ecosystem to handle used textile take-back through integrated software and an extensive logistics network, reducing the environmental impact of fashion operations.
  • Repair: With producers now obligated to provide consumers with repair facilities, Reconomy’s repair network can restore used textiles to a reusable or resalable condition, offering advice in this area.

Built on a robust international network and profound resource management expertise, Reconomy’s service reinforces the commitment to waste reduction and environmental preservation, promising compliance and a journey toward a sustainable, less wasteful fashion future.

FAQs

The circular economy in fashion is a system-wide approach that keeps clothing, materials and fibres in use for as long as possible through design, reuse, repair, resale and recycling, while reducing reliance on virgin resources. 

Circular fashion focuses on product-level strategies like reuse and repair, while the circular economy in fashion addresses the entire system, including supply chains, infrastructure, policy and data. 

It helps reduce textile waste, conserve natural resources, lower emissions and create more resilient and sustainable supply chains.

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) requires brands to take responsibility for the lifecycle of their products, including funding collection, recycling and waste management systems.

Key challenges include limited recycling infrastructure, complex supply chains, high costs, and consumer behaviour driven by fast fashion.

Businesses can adopt circular design, invest in recycling and reverse logistics, implement data tracking systems, and prepare for regulatory changes such as EPR.

Technology enables traceability, improves recycling processes, and supports data-driven decision-making across supply chains.

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