About the data
What Fuels Fashion?’ is a special edition report of the Global Fashion Transparency Index. It has been designed to measure transparency of brand disclosure about climate and energy-related data in their own operations and supply chains. The research is broken down into five key themes, including: Accountability, Decarbonisation, Energy Procurement, Financing Decarbonisation and Just Transition and Advocacy.
200 of the world's largest fashion brands have been selected based on their annual turnover, over $1 billion USD and representing a spread of market segments including high street, luxury, sportswear, accessories, footwear and denim from across Europe, North America, South America, Asia and Africa. Where brands are privately held, estimates have been made regarding their size and turnover. Geographic spread is considered too.
200 of the world's largest fashion brands have been selected based on their annual turnover, over $1 billion USD and representing a spread of market segments including high street, luxury, sportswear, accessories, footwear and denim from across Europe, North America, South America, Asia and Africa. Where brands are privately held, estimates have been made regarding their size and turnover. Geographic spread is considered too.
Methodology
Progress should be demonstrated through publicly disclosed strategies or actions that support the use of renewable electricity in the supply chain. This may include evidence of a structured approach that prioritizes local and/or additional renewable energy procurement, such as:
- Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) or Virtual Power Purchase Agreements (VPPAs)
- Contracts with energy suppliers
- On-site renewable energy generation
To be considered progress, disclosures should include details on:
- The type of renewable electricity procurement method (e.g., PPA, utility contract)
- The location of renewable electricity generation for each method
- The volume of electricity procured through each method
- For PPAs, whether associated certificates (e.g., RECs/EACs) are bundled, unbundled, or canceled
- Any mandatory renewable electricity requirements for suppliers, such as setting targets or meeting specific thresholds
We only award points for publicly disclosed information on the brand or parent company's own website. This means information disclosed on:
• Sustainability/CR microsite, provided there is a direct web link to it from the main brand or parent company website;
• In annual reports or annual sustainability/CSR reports (only counted if dated January 2023 or later) published on the brand or parent company website;
• In any other documents which are publicly available and can be downloaded freely from the brands' website; or
• Via external, third party websites but only when there is a direct web link from the brand or parent company's website to the third party website (e.g. Bangladesh Accord, Better Work, CDP, FLA, ETI, BSCI/amfori websites) where specific disclosures can be found.
The methodology is based on existing international standards and benchmarks such as: SDGs, ETI Base Code, UNGPs, OECD Due Diligence Guidelines, Fair Labor Association’s Freedom of Association guidelines, the GhG Protocol, CDP, Climate Action 100+ among others. It has also been developed to align with other industry benchmarks and relevant initiatives including the Transparency Pledge, Corporate Human Rights Benchmark, the Open Data Standard for the Apparel Sector and the World Benchmarking Alliance.
- Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) or Virtual Power Purchase Agreements (VPPAs)
- Contracts with energy suppliers
- On-site renewable energy generation
To be considered progress, disclosures should include details on:
- The type of renewable electricity procurement method (e.g., PPA, utility contract)
- The location of renewable electricity generation for each method
- The volume of electricity procured through each method
- For PPAs, whether associated certificates (e.g., RECs/EACs) are bundled, unbundled, or canceled
- Any mandatory renewable electricity requirements for suppliers, such as setting targets or meeting specific thresholds
We only award points for publicly disclosed information on the brand or parent company's own website. This means information disclosed on:
• Sustainability/CR microsite, provided there is a direct web link to it from the main brand or parent company website;
• In annual reports or annual sustainability/CSR reports (only counted if dated January 2023 or later) published on the brand or parent company website;
• In any other documents which are publicly available and can be downloaded freely from the brands' website; or
• Via external, third party websites but only when there is a direct web link from the brand or parent company's website to the third party website (e.g. Bangladesh Accord, Better Work, CDP, FLA, ETI, BSCI/amfori websites) where specific disclosures can be found.
The methodology is based on existing international standards and benchmarks such as: SDGs, ETI Base Code, UNGPs, OECD Due Diligence Guidelines, Fair Labor Association’s Freedom of Association guidelines, the GhG Protocol, CDP, Climate Action 100+ among others. It has also been developed to align with other industry benchmarks and relevant initiatives including the Transparency Pledge, Corporate Human Rights Benchmark, the Open Data Standard for the Apparel Sector and the World Benchmarking Alliance.
License
Topics
Framework Mappings
Value Type
Category
Options
Yes
No
Assessment
Steward Assessed
