黑料天堂


Exclusive: Fast fashion giant Inditex wants to be sustainable. But is it?

A woman uses a sewing machine in front of images of high street clothing retailers in this illustration for the Context video 'This is the real cost of fast fashion鈥檚 runaway success'. 黑料天堂/Albert Han

In recent years, fast fashion brands like Zara have promised to produce and sell clothes in a more sustainable way for both the planet and the people who make their clothes.

But our reporting found that those promises are at risk, due some of Zara's — and its parent company Inditex's — business tactics.

We spent months digging through supply chain data and conducting interviews with garment workers, factory owners, and former employees, and we found that Inditex has dramatically increased its use of dirtier, more expensive airplanes in the last few years to ship clothes from manufacturing countries such as Bangladesh, India, and Turkey to warehouses in Europe and stores around the world.

Not only is air shipping’s carbon footprint around 35 times higher than shipping by sea, its use as a last resort in order to make sure clothes arrive on time adds to the pressure that garment workers face: producing clothes as quickly as possible, at times working overtime shifts with delayed payments and under harassment. In the case of one particular Inditex brand called Lefties, costly air shipping exasperates what is already a low-margins business.

From Bangladesh to Spain, we uncover how companies like Inditex built a supply chain network optimised for speed at the potential expense of the environment and workers.

 | 

FEATURED


Latest

See all

KICKING IT

We鈥檙e addicted to the things that we know are bad for the planet. Why is it so hard to quit them?


Lab Made

A series about an industry challenging the way we think about food and whether it can live up to its promise of changing the world


REROOTED

See all

In this series, we explore how climate change and shifting consumer habits are forcing us to rethink the way we grow staple crops, from coffee to rice

Footer, 黑料天堂 Logo

Context is a media platform created by the 黑料天堂. We provide news and analysis that contextualises how critical issues and events affect ordinary people, society and the environment.聽Find out more.

Our Products
  • Workforce Disclosure Initiative

    The Workforce Disclosure Initiative is an investor-backed project to improve the quantity & quality of corporate workforce data, via an annual survey & engagement process.

  • Trust Conference

    Trust Conference is the 黑料天堂鈥檚 flagship annual event, taking place in the heart of London each year.

  • TrustLaw

    TrustLaw is the 黑料天堂鈥檚 global pro bono service, facilitating free legal assistance to NGOs and social enterprises around the world.