The Business of Fashion
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
BERLIN, Germany — Primark, the fashion chain owned by Associated British Foods, has emphasised its commitment to environmental standards and safer working conditions as it fights for market share in discount-loving Germany and other countries.
The company's low prices came under scrutiny in 2013 after 1,129 people died in the collapse of a factory in Bangladesh, where clothes were made for brands including Primark.
That prompted it to ramp up efforts to police its suppliers, building up a team of over 100 people who focus on ethical trade and environmental and sustainability issues.
"Germany is the homeland of Aldi and Lidl so German customers appreciate low prices, good quality," said Wolfgang Krogmann, head of Primark in Germany, as the chain opened its 28th store in the country in west Berlin.
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"They understand that kind of model. That is definitely in our favour."
German shoppers are also more demanding when it comes to ethical standards, Krogmann said, prompting the company to trial "Primark Cares" posters in its stores in the country, with information about its factories and how it sources raw materials.
Germany is a key growth market for Primark, which is expanding across continental Europe and the United States after nearing saturation point in Britain and Ireland. It expects to open two more stores in Germany in the current financial year, after five in the 2017/18 fiscal year.
But it is locked in a battle with rival discount retailer H&M, successfully drawing customers away from the Swedish company's 458 German stores. H&M saw sales steadily decline in Germany, its biggest market, in the last two years until a rebound in its latest quarter.
H&M is another major brand putting a bigger emphasis on sustainability. It, Primark and other retailers are seeking to promote recycling and more environmentally-friendly cotton farming methods in response to customer concerns.
"We don't want to give the impression that we've got everything right... We're on a gradual journey," said Katharine Stewart, Primark's head of ethical trade and environmental sustainability.
Primark, which has 360 stores globally, will roll out more products next spring made from cotton planted under its sustainable farming programme in Pakistan, including children's pyjamas and women's jeans.
"We now know it works. We know we can... get visibility all the way through the supply chain," Stewart said.
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Primark has slightly slowed its pace of expansion in the last year as like-for-like sales have declined, but it still plans to open 14 new stores in the 2018/19 financial year, with most in Germany, France, Spain and Britain.
By Emma Thomasson; Editor: Kirsten Donovan.
France is pressing ahead with a ‘game-changing’ bill that would impose a ‘sin tax’-style penalty on fast-fashion products as high as €10 per item by 2030.
In the weeks since one of the industry’s most promising recycling start-ups filed for bankruptcy, big brands have put more money and more commitment into bringing innovations to market.
Thirty years of providing the world’s finest wool to the fashion house Loro Piana has done almost nothing for the Indigenous people of the Peruvian Andes.
The fast-fashion giant has joined Vargas and TPG to back a new polyester recycling venture following its failed bet on Renewcell.