redefining textile industry’s recycling process

9
Building resilient infrastructure to promote inclusiveness, sustainable industrialization and foster innovation in Spain Team 8: Olia Bolotina | Romulo Delgado | Kristin Siegel | Andres Rodriguez | Jose A. Soto | Ana C. Vasquez The waste of plenty is the resource of scarcity

Upload: romulo-delgado

Post on 17-Aug-2015

101 views

Category:

Retail


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Building resilient infrastructure to promote inclusiveness, sustainable industrialization and

foster innovation in Spain

Team 8: Olia Bolotina | Romulo Delgado | Kristin Siegel | Andres Rodriguez | Jose A. Soto | Ana C. Vasquez

The waste of plenty is the resource of scarcity

THE PROBLEM

70% Of world population uses

second hand clothes

191 T-Shirtsevery year.

The average American throws away

10.5M tons are sent to landfills.

17 - 20%Industrial water pollution comes

from textile industry.

the carbon footprint of that fancy T-shirt you are wearing is estimated to be around 6 Kg

THE DESIRED OUTCOME OF THE PROPOSAL

THE PROBLEM

OBJECTIVE | IMPACT PROPOSAL STAKEHOLDERS

EVALUATIONIMPLEMENTATION

Environmental Impact

• Reduction of :• CO2 emission• Water usage• Raw materials used

Social Impact

• Creation of new jobs• Increased awareness of

environmental and social issues

Company Impact

• New stream of revenue• Enhanced image /

brand

Presence in 88 markets in all five continents,

with upwards of 6,683 stores and 137,054 employees1

BREAK POLLUTION CYCLE BY REUSING, REPAIRING AND RECYCLING THE PRODUCT

THE PROBLEM

OBJECTIVE | IMPACT PROPOSAL STAKEHOLDERS

EVALUATIONIMPLEMENTATION

Bin

Landfill

Pollution

Reuse Repair Recycle

Transport

New Markets

Raw Materials

Collecting Points

THE PROBLEM

OBJECTIVE | IMPACT PROPOSAL STAKEHOLDERS

EVALUATIONIMPLEMENTATION

ZRecycle

Reuse

Repair

4/7people are more

likely to shop at a business if they

know it is hosting a textile

recycling bin

Extend the life cycle of clothes, allowing emerging economies to acquire a premium brand at an

affordable price.

Ship clothes that require minimal changes to local designers and

merchants in the emerging country that would repair and resell those

clothes in their markets.

Sort out the clothes by fiber and color. Shred into reclaimed fiber that

can either be used for non-woven textile and/or stuffing, or blended

with stable fiber and spun into yarn.

WIN-WIN RELATIONSHIPS

Happy customers that walk-out with vouchers for their

contribution

That are supported by a sustainable model without disrupting local economies fostering entrepreneuriship

Thriving Economies

New sustainable

revenue stream for Inditex

BREAK POLLUTION CYCLE BY REUSING, REPAIRING AND RECYCLING THE PRODUCT

INDITEX STAKEHOLDER MANAGEMENT

THE PROBLEM

OBJECTIVE | IMPACT PROPOSAL STAKEHOLDERS

EVALUATIONIMPLEMENTATION

RECYCLE, REUSE AND REPAIR FEEDBACK LOOPS

New MarketsIndustry

Reuse & RepairRecycle

Ecological Impact Reports

Qualitative Customer Surveys

Customer Loyalty Index

Inventory Alert System

Sorting

THE PROBLEM

OBJECTIVE | IMPACT PROPOSAL STAKEHOLDERS

EVALUATIONIMPLEMENTATION

METRICS TO ASSESS SUCCESS AND EVALUATION

THE PROBLEM

OBJECTIVE | IMPACT PROPOSAL STAKEHOLDERS

EVALUATIONIMPLEMENTATION

Environmental Impact Metrics

• Reduction of greenhouse gas emissions

• Water footprint• Amount of raw

materials used• Energy usage

Social Impact Metrics

• Number of newly created jobs in the recycling process

• Number of people at the bottom-of the-pyramid served

Company Impact Metrics

• Budget spent on recycling R&D and innovation

• Revenue stream from new markets

• Cost savings

All stakeholders in the system need to work together and act in union to solve the global problem.

Thank You!