TEXTILE
VALUE CHAIN
Sustainability and Circularity in the textile Value Chain - UNEP
VALUE CHAIN
IN TEXTILE INDUSTRY
The textile value chain comprises all activities and stakeholders that provide or receive value from designing, developing, making, distributing, retailing and consuming a textile product (or providing a service that a textile product renders), including the extraction and supply of raw materials, as well as activities involving a textile after its useful service life has ended.
The value chain covers all stages in a textile product’s life, from supply of raw materials through to disposal after use, and includes the activities linked to value creation, such as business models, consumption patterns, investments and regulation.
The value chain also comprises the actors undertaking the activities, and the stakeholders that can influence those activities.
The textile value chain is thus considered as a whole system that goes beyond the supply chain and the life cycle of products.*
LIFE CYCLE
SOLUTIONS
REMAKING
REPAIR
RESALE
RENTAL
REMAKING
REPAIR
RESALE
RENTAL
Four bussines models that have the potential to decouple revenue streams from production and resource use - currently represent a $73 billion market
Source: UNEP (2023) Sustainability and Circularity in the Textile Value Chain – A Global Roadmap
TIERS
For the Textile Value Chain, it is common to distinguish the value chain stages as tiers, as shown in the figure below.
Tier 4
RAW MATERIAL EXTRACTION
Tier 3
RAW MATERIAL PROCESSING
Tier 2
MATERIAL PRODUCTION
Tier 1
FINISHED PRODUCTION ASSEMBLY
Tier 0
OFFICE, RETAIL, DISTRIBUTION
Consumer use
CARE, WASHING, CLEANING
END OF LIFE
REUSE, RECYCLE, LANDFILL