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Big Closets Small Planet
Michael Schragger
57 episodes
3 weeks ago
Fashion and apparel. It touches nearly everyone. When its at its best, fashion and apparel is not only functional, but also fun, expressive, sexy, and for some businesses, very profitable. But when it is at its worst, fashion and apparel is superficial, exploitative, polluting and extremely wasteful - in other words the essence of unsustainable consumption. And while it is argued that the industry's rapid growth has created employment opportunities for more than 300 million people worldwide, especially for women in poorer countries and those in extreme poverty, many garment workers still struggle to earn enough to pay to meet even their most basic needs. More alarming is the fact that as the industry grows - by 2030 more than 8 billion people will live on the planet, and nearly 5 billion of these will be part of the global middle class - its negative environmental impacts may become unmanageable, potentially undermining its social benefits and contributing to ecosystem degradation on local, regional and global scales. Who would have thought garments could be so destructive? The fashion industry must change now, but will we manage in time? Join Mike Schragger, founder of the Sustainable Fashion Academy, as he explores the challenges, incentives and disincentives and emerging solutions needed to rapidly transform the industry. Listen in as he talks with the business leaders, activists, researchers, innovators and entrepreneurs, investors, legislators, consumers and citizens - who are racing against the clock to find solutions that will transform the industry, thus ensuring it truly operates for the benefit of people and the planet. www.sustainablefashionacademy.org/podcasts/big-closets-small-planet
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Fashion and apparel. It touches nearly everyone. When its at its best, fashion and apparel is not only functional, but also fun, expressive, sexy, and for some businesses, very profitable. But when it is at its worst, fashion and apparel is superficial, exploitative, polluting and extremely wasteful - in other words the essence of unsustainable consumption. And while it is argued that the industry's rapid growth has created employment opportunities for more than 300 million people worldwide, especially for women in poorer countries and those in extreme poverty, many garment workers still struggle to earn enough to pay to meet even their most basic needs. More alarming is the fact that as the industry grows - by 2030 more than 8 billion people will live on the planet, and nearly 5 billion of these will be part of the global middle class - its negative environmental impacts may become unmanageable, potentially undermining its social benefits and contributing to ecosystem degradation on local, regional and global scales. Who would have thought garments could be so destructive? The fashion industry must change now, but will we manage in time? Join Mike Schragger, founder of the Sustainable Fashion Academy, as he explores the challenges, incentives and disincentives and emerging solutions needed to rapidly transform the industry. Listen in as he talks with the business leaders, activists, researchers, innovators and entrepreneurs, investors, legislators, consumers and citizens - who are racing against the clock to find solutions that will transform the industry, thus ensuring it truly operates for the benefit of people and the planet. www.sustainablefashionacademy.org/podcasts/big-closets-small-planet
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Education
Business
Episodes (20/57)
Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Do we need to reimagine growth in apparel? Textile Exchange makes the case.
6 months ago
1 hour 35 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Ken Pucker is a thought leader and an independent voice. Is anyone listening?
6 months ago
39 minutes 21 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: How much is enough? Can a "sufficiency" approach be applied to textile policy?
6 months ago
52 minutes 30 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: How Elisabeth Peregi, the Kappahl Group's CEO, views climate action.
6 months ago
43 minutes 8 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Status Update: Will the New York and California Fashion Act bills pass?
6 months ago
42 minutes 2 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Will EU's textile legislation reduce industry emissions at the pace and scale required?
6 months ago
54 minutes 10 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Watchdogs Action Speaks Louder & Fashion Revolution want more from the industry.
6 months ago
55 minutes 7 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Professor Hakan Karaosman is still asking: "Where are the workers' voices?"
6 months ago
50 minutes 15 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: The Laudes Foundation explains its approach for ensuring a Just Transition.
6 months ago
41 minutes 49 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Jason Judd wants the apparel industry to take heat stress very seriously.
6 months ago
35 minutes 37 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Apparel Impact Institute has a decarbonization strategy for the industry. Is it working?
6 months ago
1 hour 2 minutes 32 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Will climate-related innovations save us? We asked Lutz Walter from Textile ETP.
6 months ago
1 hour 2 minutes 15 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: WRAP believes we need a standardized way to measure circular business models.
6 months ago
36 minutes 53 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: The Good Fashion Fund has tested its impact model. It is time to scale up.
6 months ago
55 minutes 22 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Will we soon see a breakthrough for "next-gen" man-made cellulosic textiles?
6 months ago
48 minutes 28 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Will H&M reach its climate targets and decouple emissions from financial growth?
6 months ago
1 hour 3 minutes

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: These manufacturers argue a paradigm shift is needed for successful climate action.
6 months ago
1 hour 15 minutes 3 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Will energy benchmarks for apparel change the game? Kurt & Phil think so.
6 months ago
41 minutes 14 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
CLIMATE ACTION WEEK: Factory decarbonization expert Peter Ford is surprisingly optimistic about 2030.
6 months ago
50 minutes 35 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
THOUGHT LEADERSHIP: Dr. Jennifer Hinton Thinks Not-for-Profit Business Models Can Help Address The Problems of Fast Fashion.
1 year ago
53 minutes 25 seconds

Big Closets Small Planet
Fashion and apparel. It touches nearly everyone. When its at its best, fashion and apparel is not only functional, but also fun, expressive, sexy, and for some businesses, very profitable. But when it is at its worst, fashion and apparel is superficial, exploitative, polluting and extremely wasteful - in other words the essence of unsustainable consumption. And while it is argued that the industry's rapid growth has created employment opportunities for more than 300 million people worldwide, especially for women in poorer countries and those in extreme poverty, many garment workers still struggle to earn enough to pay to meet even their most basic needs. More alarming is the fact that as the industry grows - by 2030 more than 8 billion people will live on the planet, and nearly 5 billion of these will be part of the global middle class - its negative environmental impacts may become unmanageable, potentially undermining its social benefits and contributing to ecosystem degradation on local, regional and global scales. Who would have thought garments could be so destructive? The fashion industry must change now, but will we manage in time? Join Mike Schragger, founder of the Sustainable Fashion Academy, as he explores the challenges, incentives and disincentives and emerging solutions needed to rapidly transform the industry. Listen in as he talks with the business leaders, activists, researchers, innovators and entrepreneurs, investors, legislators, consumers and citizens - who are racing against the clock to find solutions that will transform the industry, thus ensuring it truly operates for the benefit of people and the planet. www.sustainablefashionacademy.org/podcasts/big-closets-small-planet