A new industry collaboration, the Circular Fibre Collective, has been launched with the aim of turning recycled and next-generation fibre commitments into bankable, scalable demand across fashion’s supply chain. The initiative is designed to accelerate uptake of textile-to-textile recycled fibres and other emerging materials by tackling the commercial obstacles that have kept most innovations stuck in pilots.
The Circular Fibre Collective brings together The Fashion Pact and Fashion for Good, with the Ellen MacArthur Foundation providing strategic input on circular economy design. The partners say the programme offers a structured route for brands and suppliers to coordinate decisions that are difficult to make in isolation particularly when volumes are small, pricing is uncertain and supply remains uneven.
The group’s early priorities include building voluntary, aggregated demand across participating brands, testing financing models that could support new capacity, mapping supply availability and identifying policy levers that could help create more supportive market conditions. It also plans to roll out practical adoption support, including tools and cohorts to help companies move from intent to execution.
The Collective is responding to a persistent set of constraints: demand for next-generation materials is scattered across brands and seasons, financing for new plants remains limited, and recycling infrastructure—especially for post-consumer textile waste—has not developed fast enough to supply large volumes. As a result, the share of global fibre production coming from recycled sources remains low, particularly for fibres made from used clothing, even as regulation tightens and corporate targets multiply.
Research referenced by the initiative, from Boston Consulting Group and Fashion for Good, suggests collaboration could materially change the scale equation. It estimates that capacity for these fibres could rise to as much as two million tonnes by 2030, potentially representing around 8% of global fibre production if investment and adoption accelerate.
To help close the gap, the Circular Fibre Collective plans to strengthen market signals through pooled demand, while also expanding practical resources that address procurement and commercial hurdles. The initiative expects to build on programmes such as Fashion for Good’s Fiber Club and a dedicated toolkit, alongside brand support cohorts intended to help participants navigate pricing, contracting and supply-chain readiness.
The Fashion Pact’s executive director Eva von Alvensleben framed the launch as a coordinated attempt to unlock investment and speed adoption. “The Circular Fibre Collective demonstrates the power of collective action. Together, we can bring a strong, unified voice to accelerate the scaling of textile-to-textile recycled and next-generation materials. By sending a clear market signal through CEO leadership, we believe this will drive both investment and adoption across the industry.”
Fashion for Good managing director Katrin Ley said the group is structured around a simple insight: markets move when brands act together, not when they make isolated promises. “We’ve been working with brands on next-generation material adoption long enough to know that good intentions don’t move markets shared engagement does. The Circular Fibre Collective is built on that premise, and our Fiber Club work gives us a concrete foundation to build from.”
Under the partnership model, The Fashion Pact will take the lead on aggregated demand and exploring financial structures, while Fashion for Good will manage and develop practical adoption tools. The Ellen MacArthur Foundation will continue to advise on circularity principles to ensure the initiative remains aligned with broader system change goals.
The launch follows consultations with 25 major fashion brands and draws on Fashion for Good and BCG research, including a February 2025 report suggesting that by the end of the decade up to 13 million tonnes of next-generation materials and textile-to-textile recycled fibres could reach the market if scaling barriers are addressed.
Ellen MacArthur Foundation chief strategy and innovation officer Joe Murphy said the moment has shifted from vision-setting to execution. “It was great to have supported the design of this initiative. The vision of a circular economy for fashion and textiles is clear. The past decade has built real momentum behind it. Now is the time to move to implementation at scale and initiatives such as this are an important step on the long term journey.”































