


The intersection of technology & sustainability is reshaping the global fashion landscape, driving a new era of transparency, efficiency & creativity. From AI-powered design tools to blockchain-enabled traceability systems, technology is helping entrepreneurs and brands rethink how clothes are made, marketed & consumed, fostering a more responsible & circular industry.
Digitalisation: The Catalyst for Change
As the FAIR FASHION project’s Good Practice Case Study Collection highlights, technology is not just a supporting tool but a transformative driver in achieving sustainability. The case of The Fabricant in the Netherlands exemplifies this shift. By replacing physical samples with digital prototypes, The Fabricant enables brands to design, review & approve collections entirely online. Their AI-powered tools allow for rapid, photorealistic visualisations of garments, drastically reducing waste, energy consumption & the need for global shipping during sample reviews.
As Adriana Pereira from The Fabricant notes, “By shifting all design & approval processes to digital, we eliminate unnecessary sampling & waste. This approach not only reduces the industry’s environmental impact but also enables brands to be more creative & efficient.”
This example demonstrates how digital fashion can help decouple creativity from physical production, creating space for experimentation without the environmental cost.
Data-Driven Transparency & Circularity
Technology also plays a crucial role in improving traceability & accountability. The Danish brand KnowledgeCotton Apparel utilises blockchain-based digital passports via the Retraced platform to provide customers with complete visibility of a garment’s lifecycle, from the cotton seed to the consumer. This integration not only boosts consumer trust but also empowers brands to make data-informed decisions about material sourcing, carbon footprints & supplier performance. Such transparency is fast becoming the foundation of ethical fashion, aligning with the EU’s forthcoming Digital Product Passport regulations.
Artificial Intelligence & Predictive Sustainability
AI and automation are reshaping how sustainability goals are achieved across the textile value chain. The Turkish company Orhun AI Labs – Optimimax has developed an Eco-Design AI Assistant capable of predicting a product’s environmental impact from the earliest design stages. By integrating with production data, it helps manufacturers estimate real-time impacts, such as energy consumption & carbon emissions, allowing companies to optimise processes before production even begins. This type of predictive sustainability marks a major leap toward smarter, greener manufacturing systems.

Repair, Resale & Consumer Empowerment
Technology is also revolutionising post-consumer systems. The Dutch start-up MENDED integrates digital repair services directly into fashion brand platforms, making it as easy to repair an item as it is to buy a new one. Its online platform manages booking, shipping & tracking while providing brands with data on garment durability & material weaknesses insights that inform better future designs. By turning repair into a seamless, data-backed process, MENDED is helping to close the loop on clothing consumption.
The Future of Sustainable Fashion
Recent studies echo what these pioneering enterprises show in practice: digitalisation is key to sustainability. According to the Global Fashion Agenda’s 2024 Fashion CEO Agenda Report, technologies such as AI, blockchain, 3D design, & digital sampling could reduce fashion’s carbon emissions by up to 30% by 2030 if scaled across the industry. This potential demonstrates how technology, when combined with creative & ethical leadership, can transform fashion into a force for good.
Technology is not just enabling sustainability; it’s defining it.
By Paula Whyte (Momentum Marketing Services)
Edited by Alexandro Dreyer Duarte (NUAS)