Indian wheat straw has been successfully converted into lyocell fibre, yarn, and finished garments comparable to wood-based alternatives, in a proof-of-concept pilot led by Canopy and Laudes Foundation. The project has shown that agricultural residues can replace wood-based pulp in lyocell production, cutting forest pressure and reducing crop-burning pollution across northern India.
Manmade cellulosic fibres have been marketed as renewable alternatives to synthetics, derived from forest wood rather than petroleum. Yet the forest economy supplying them is tightening. Climate shocks, land competition, and rising compliance expectations are constraining the pool of credible, traceable fibre. For apparel brands positioning viscose and modal as decarbonisation levers, the exposure is shifting from reputational to structural.
Fashion for Good has unveiled its Price Parity Toolkit, a new financing model designed to remove cost premiums on next-gen materials by decoupling added expenses early in the supply chain. The framework enables brands to fund premiums directly at Tier 4, helping innovators scale manufacturing, reduce compounded markups and strengthen industry adoption of lower-impact alternatives supported by partners and funders.
New Delhi, India:Indian fashion brands Doodlage, Lovebirds, Ka-Sha, Paiwand Studio, Sonam Khetan, and Urvashi Kaur are the latest to join Canopy, a solutions-driven environmental non-profit and global movement to safeguard the world’s climate- and biodiversity-critical forests and accelerate Next Gen Solutions for the fashion industry. These...
For the first time ever Canopy's Hot Button Report has awarded the coveted 'green shirt' status to three global producers—India-based Aditya Birla, Austria-based Lenzing, and China-based Tangshan Sanyou.
The message from the Textile Exchange conference at Pasadena was clear: transformation is within reach. From regenerative practices to circularity that benefits all, it was a clarion call to trade extractive growth for a future that thrives on restoration and collaboration.
As the world looks for innovative solutions to reduce carbon emissions and preserve vital ecosystems, environmental NGO Canopy underscores the critical role India can play in this global shift as it has the potential to transform 100 million tonnes of agricultural residues and polyester-cotton textile waste into valuable low-carbon paper, packaging, and viscose for the global markets.
Fashion for Good has launched ‘Re-Start’, a textile recovery alliance in India, and released a toolkit designed to revalorise textile waste in the country.
In a move to protect the world’s vital ecosystems, a clutch of leading fashion brands including H&M, Inditex and Kering have announced a collective commitment to purchase over half a million tonnes of low-carbon, low-footprint alternative fibres for fashion textiles and paper packaging.