MARIAN Fernandez, 56, a former employee of Inditex, rearranges clothes at the store window display of her fashion shop Maazi in downtown A Coruna, in northern Spain, Nov. 18, 2022. 鈥 REUTERS/MIGUEL VIDAL

COPENHAGEN 鈥 The European Commission wants all planned regulations requiring fashion companies to produce clothes in a more sustainable way to be in place by 2028, the European Union (EU) environment commissioner said on Tuesday.

The Commission is looking to tackle textile consumption in Europe, which has the fourth highest impact on the environment and climate change after food, housing and transport.

Europe鈥檚 biggest fast fashion firms Inditex and H&M show no signs of slowing down production, but are looking to use less water and energy and more recycled textiles.

鈥淭he fashion industry has kind of escaped regulation, but we see that they are a big pressure for natural resources and with regard to pollution. We have to react,鈥 Virginijus Sinkevi膷ius said in an interview at the Global Fashion Summit in Copenhagen.

The Commission is drafting at least 16 pieces of legislation that will make fashion companies take responsibility for the environmental impact of the clothes they produce.

鈥楥HALLENGE鈥 FOR FAST FASHION
Mr. Sinkevi膷ius said the measures, which will be in place in the next 5 years, will be a 鈥渃hallenge鈥 for fast fashion brands.

The Commission will require fashion companies to either collect an amount of textile waste that is equivalent to a certain percentage of their production, or pay a fee towards local authorities鈥 waste collection work.

The amount will gradually increase every few years.

The Commission is still working on an initial percentage that fashion companies will have to collect.

鈥淚t definitely will be higher than 5%鈥 of production, Mr. Sinkevi膷ius said.

The European Union鈥檚 goal is that, by 2030, fashion companies will produce more durable pieces that can be reused and more easily recycled.

Around 5.8 million tonnes of textile products are discarded every year in the EU, equivalent to 11 kg (24 lb) per person. A truckload of textile products is land-filled or incinerated somewhere in the world every second, according to EU figures.

The Commission is also working on regulations that would restrict brands鈥 use of sustainable claims to advertise clothing. It estimates that half of these claims, or 鈥渆co-labels鈥 are misleading.

The eco-label regulation on textiles will come into force at the beginning of next year, the commissioner said.

EU governments agreed last month that the bloc should also ban the destruction of unsold textiles as part of the EU鈥檚 green strategy to encourage more reuse and recycling.

Mr. Sinkevi膷ius said the ban rule would take 鈥渟ix months or even more鈥 to be implemented. 鈥 Reuters