Art and Culture
Is Uniqlo’s ‘LifeWear’ as Sustainable as it Claims?
Uniqlo’s philosophy is based on timeless basics that survive trends and last for years. Sorted in attractive colour gradients, the brand proposes a modern approach to fashion through a simplified wardrobe that satisfies our everyday needs. From that perspective, it is hard to associate the brand with other fast fashion giants. But, is Uniqlo as sustainable as it claims to be?
Uniqlo was founded in 1949 by Tadashi Yanai in Ube, Yamaguchi, as a subsidiary company of Fast Retailing. When the company name was associated with fast fashion and faced controversy, Yanai corrected:
Our mission is to create clothes that are non-disposable, long-lasting, and which function as perfect components, providing the ultimate in everyday wear. That is our approach to sustainability.
That approach was promoted through a large-scale immersive exhibition, The Art and Science of LifeWear: New Form Follows Function, held at the Somerset House during the London Design Week 2019. The highly attended event aimed to showcase Uniqlo’s sustainable LifeWear concept as “simple, high-quality, everyday clothing with a practical sense of beauty and designed to make everyone’s life better.”
Despite the efforts, the Impakter Index has just given Uniqlo a C rating, which means Uniqlo is “mediocre” on the front of sustainability. How exactly did that happen?
Whilst the green claims are strong, the supply chain behind Japan’s favourite brand tells another story.
Typical fast-fashion business models are based on copying the latest catwalk creations at affordable prices within a two-week turnaround. Uniqlo, however, proposes a forward-thinking strategy based on two key points:
- technical, focusing on quality materials; and
- design, focusing on consumers’ needs rather than short-term trends.
This means, for example, that when your faux-leather Zara trousers might only last a season, your Uniqlo acrylic-woolen underlayer can hardly get out of style. That philosophy in itself proves to be more sustainable than Uniqlo’s competing giants. Or at least, that’s the marketing strategy.
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According to the Impakter Index team report, Uniqlo also presents itself as fully committed to sustainability through the publishing of annual reports which includes clear Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) objectives. In fact, the brand has developed ambitious recycling initiatives and responsible procurement strategies such as the following:
- Using fibers made from recycled PET bottles to produce its Dry-Ex pieces.
- Attempting to eliminate single-use plastics from its supply chain, such as using paper instead of plastic bags.
- Collecting used Ultra Light Down items from customers, which will be extracted and turned into new products.
- Inviting customers to bring any unwanted Uniqlo clothing to its stores to be recycled and donated to UNHCR.
From a social perspective, as of 2019, Uniqlo also demonstrated its ethical commitment through notable achievements including:
- Increasing the percentage of women in management positions 38.4%.
- Employing people with disabilities, accounting for 5.02% of Group employees in Japan, far exceeding the statutory requirement (2.2%).
- Employing 105 refugees in seven countries.
- Reaching a 31.6% reduction in CO2 emissions, compared with 2013, per unit of floor area.
- Donating 36.57 million items to 72 developing nations.
However, the brand’s sustainability measures are not as transparent as they seem.
In their 2020 annual report, Uniqlo failed to disclose whether they were meeting their target and goals, and how much progress has been made. The lack of a Chief Sustainability Officer at Fast Retailing also demonstrates a lack of commitment to continuous sustainable development.
Furthermore, Uniqlo has been under fire after the Jaba Garmindo scandal in 2015, when two Indonesian factories closed down overnight without paying legally required severance payments as well as several months of wages to 2,000 workers, 80% of whom are women.
According to the Clean Clothes Campaign, whose members filed the complaints against Uniqlo, the workers are owed a total of US$ 5.5 million. A modest sum compared to Fast Retailing’s annual revenue of $5.96 billion, and Yanai’s personal fortune estimated at $31.9 billion (2020), making the CEO one of the wealthiest individuals in Japan.
According to War On Want and SACOM, investigations of two Chinese Uniqlo factories in 2016 led to catastrophic discoveries of human rights abuses, from excessive and unpaid overtime to chemically hazardous workplace environments. The undercover investigators found that during the peak season, workers had to soak their swollen feet in hot water to relieve pain and fatigue, and were forced to work overtime because their wages fell well below the minimum wage for the region.
Despite Fast Retailing’s claim that it takes the “utmost care to protect the health and safety” of workers, SACOM found that they were subject to “working conditions which included extremely high temperatures, unsafe facilities, no protective gear, poor ventilation with high cotton dust levels in the air, the use of toxic chemicals and high risk of electricity leakages,” making it clear that Uniqlo was far from the ethical brand it tries to portray to the public.
Uniqlo made a start with animal welfare by banning the use of angora, shearling, and fur. The brand was certified by the Responsible Down Standard for their procurement, yet continues to produce leather and cashmere clothing without providing traceability to the first stage of production. Once a highly expensive commodity, Uniqlo’s cashmere items can be found at 79.99$. The rising demand for a material increasingly hard to produce, due to the desertification of native grasslands, is adding enormous pressure on both the animals and the environment, a crisis that major cashmere producers like Uniqlo choose to ignore.
Uniqlo relies on a fast fashion business model based on maximising profit at the planet and people’s cost, yet refuses to admit it. And whilst the timeless basics and quality materials are unarguably examples to follow by other industry leaders, Uniqlo has still a long way to go towards sustainability.