Extinction Rebellion, an environmental activist group, has called for a ban
of London Fashion Week in a bid to bring awareness to the excess and damage
of over consumption.
Last month, Extinction Rebellion, together with Maria Chenoweth, CEO of
Traid, and Safia Minney MBE, Founder of People Tree, delivered a letter to
the BFC, calling on them to cancel London Fashion Week.
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In their letter of response, Caroline Rush, BFC CEO agrees that “We are
facing a climate change emergency and all need to act”. However, the BFC
believe they can “use the platform of London Fashion Week to communicate
not just to the industry, but to the wider public, that not all businesses
are equal, that those that support a better future, are committed to
change, are those that should be supported.”
Sara Arnold, from the Extinction Rebellion Boycott Fashion team and founder
of fashion rental company Higher Studio, says: “We understand that the
British fashion industry is trying to change its ways but Fashion Weeks are
fundamentally at odds with the urgent need to stop needless consumption and
to direct resources to regenerating nature. Humanity cannot afford for
London Fashion Week to continue.”
Maria Chenoweth, CEO of Traid, says: “We want LFW to acknowledge that our
planet cannot sustain this level of growth and to focus on how to stop
fashion creating a climate emergency.’
Last month, the Swedish Fashion Council made the bold decision to cancel
Stockholm Fashion Week, in order to set new sustainability standards in the
industry.
In London, designers Phoebe English and Patrick McDowell have announced
their support of Extinction Rebellion’s calls for London to be the first
major fashion week to follow Sweden’s game-changing move.
Designer Patrick McDowell says: “We are running out of time and we must
stop business as usual. We must slow down and stop supporting a broken
system.”
Designer Phoebe English says: “Fashion is in a new era. Whether it likes it
or not. We must start working together towards solutions and reject
damaging practices at an unprecedented speed. It is only as a communicating
body across the entire industry that we can build a new type of making,
selling and using fashion. When the world has run dry of resources, it will
look at the wasteful and excessive garment industry as the climate criminal
it currently is.”
The theatre of excess that surrounds fashion weeks is hugely out of step
with the climate emergency that we face.
The fashion industry is one of the world’s most polluting and influential
industries. Massive labour rights issues and animal abuse also plague this
industy. As a cultural barometer of the times, fashion has a responsibility
to Tell The Truth about its environmental impact.
Total greenhouse gas emissions from textile production is more than those
of ALL international flights and maritime shipping combined. [1] At the
same time, 34.5 percent of primary microplastics are due to laundry of synthetic
textiles. [2] According to the Pulse Report 2019, global apparel production
is projected to rise by more than 60 percent by 2030; from 62 million tonnes today
to 102 million tonnes. [3] The effects on the planet are predicted to be
beyond repair.
Image courtesy of Extinction Rebellion