On October 16, the EU’s Extended Producer Responsibility (ERP) regulations for the food and textiles industries will come into force, compelling apparel brands and manufacturers to cover the costs of collecting, sorting and recycling textile waste. This major new development is occurring while European textile waste collectors are struggling to find outlets, and is causing the UK, Germany and France to develop or rethink their respective strategies.
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The UK’s Fashion & Textile Association (UKFT) recently presented its National Textile Recycling Infrastructure Plan, a 10-year plan aimed at creating a national network to collect and recycle textiles and clothing. The overall goal is to find the right destination for the three million tons of textiles discarded each year in the country. UKFT will be supported in this effort by the Circular Fashion Innovation Network and by governmental agency UK Research and Innovation.
The plan has identified four priorities: investment in infrastructure, workforce skills development, technology, and market capacity. It highlighted the need for more automated sorting and pre-processing facilities, alongside innovation in fibre-to-fibre recycling and smarter logistics.
“The National Textile Recycling Infrastructure Plan is a call to action,” said Adam Mansell, CEO of UKFT. “By aligning investment, skills and innovation, the UK can cut waste, reduce environmental impact and create new economic value in textiles for decades to come,” he added.
German industry associations team up
Germany’s textiles, apparel and footwear industry associations have collectively announced they are developing their own approach to textile waste collection and recycling in the country. They indicated their first concern is to prioritise separating natural and synthetic materials, in order to address the different challenges posed by these two types of waste. Natural and synthetic fabrics are often blended and they each need to undergo a different kind of recycling process, either chemical or mechanical.
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Besides recycling, the German industry associations have set themselves as a priority to closely monitor the textile-apparel market, ensuring that the data gathered can help make consistent plans for products at the end of their useful life. They also highlighted the need to develop structural arrangements for the companies that will be involved, and to provide consumers with appropriate information. A collective effort that will undoubtedly benefit from the expertise of HDE, Germany’s retailers association, and of textiles, apparel and footwear association BTE.
Also part of Germany’s joint industry effort are BIS, the association of footwear and leather apparel producers, Textil+Mode, representing the specialist trades in the textile-apparel sector, and Texoversum, the educational body for the apparel and footwear industries.
France redefines approach
While two of its neighbouring countries are drawing up strategies to deal with textile waste, France, which set up an ad hoc national organisation called Refashion in 2008, is thinking about how the latter should evolve. Some of the long-standing outlets for the French waste collection, sorting and recycling industry have recently all but shut down, saturated as they are with cheap Asian products, and the government is currently rethinking Refashion’s institutional future. The issue is expected to be brought to the Conseil d’État [a governmental body that acts as legal adviser to the executive] before the end of the year, but the industry fears that France’s current political instability will delay any decision on Refashion.
French textile waste collector Le Relais has tried to raise the public’s awareness by dumping waste outside stores by leading retailers, for example Decathlon’s Rennes branch – Le Relais
An even greater problem is the fact that the Ministry for Ecology itself has short-circuited industry-level talks. In July, the government announced it would raise state aid on collected waste to €228 per ton in 2026, up from €156 in 2024. The announcement was designed to defuse the conflict between Le Relais, France’s largest waste-collection organisation, and Refashion [which transfers state aid to waste collectors].
Le Relais had recently stopped processing discarded clothes, dumping huge quantities of them outside the stores of several major retailers. The aim was to raise awareness with the general public about the dire straits in which waste collectors find themselves, deprived of their outlets. Refashion, which is funded by levies on brands and importers, meanwhile accused Le Relais of abusing its dominant position.