H&M, Zalando and Arc'teryx ask how to 'make money without making more clothes'

clock • 6 min read
 H&M, Zalando and Arc'teryx ask how to 'make money without making more clothes'

Eight fashion brands have banded together to form The Fashion ReModel, a project that hopes to create a $700bn market for reuse and recycled clothes.

Arc'teryx, Zalando and H&M have joined a new organisation to create a market for reused, rented, repaired and remade clothes that could be worth $700bn by 2030, according to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation....

To continue reading this article...

Join BusinessGreen

In just a few clicks you can start your free BusinessGreen Lite membership for 12 months, providing you access to:

  • Three complimentary articles per month covering the latest real-time news, analysis, and opinion from Europe’s leading source of information on the Green economy and business
  • Receive important and breaking news stories via our daily news alert
  • Our weekly newsletter with the best of the week’s green business news and analysis

Join now

 

Already a BusinessGreen member?

Login

More on Supply chain

Plenitude: Inside the EU project aiming to build a thriving new value chain for meat-alternatives

Plenitude: Inside the EU project aiming to build a thriving new value chain for meat-alternatives

A seven-year project bringing together 10 organisations has delivered a new mycoprotein factory and reams of valuable data and insights to support the development of a circular ecosystem for alternative protein products

Michael Holder
clock 24 February 2026 • 10 min read
Bang in some beans: Wahaca and Compass Group join campaign to double bean consumption by 2028

Bang in some beans: Wahaca and Compass Group join campaign to double bean consumption by 2028

Businesses join the likes of Lidl, Sainsbury’s, M&S, and Ocado in pledging to increase portion of sales from sustainable beans, lentils, and pulses

Stuart Stone
clock 24 February 2026 • 3 min read
How Haelixa is using 'invisible DNA markers' to verify sustainable materials

How Haelixa is using 'invisible DNA markers' to verify sustainable materials

Dr Gediminas Mikutis explains how real-world supply chain controversies shaped Haelixa's approach to enabling brands to verify material claims - and how opportunities can lie in sectors where trust is broken

Stuart Stone
clock 23 February 2026 • 7 min read