[pageLogInLogOut]

#Sustainability

Textile Exchange evolves its membership structure to unlock the next stage of collective action for climate and nature

Textile Exchange is excited to announce that it is evolving its membership structure to a more action-oriented, impact-driven model designed to provide clearly defined pathways that help organizations respond to the climate and nature crisis.

For more than two decades, Textile Exchange has been guiding its growing community—which spans brands, retailers, suppliers, producers, solution providers, consultancies, NGOs and more—toward more purposefully produced materials. Today, this membership community includes over 700 organizations, supported by resources, expertise, and events that deepen shared understanding and enable progress.

Now, as the urgency for the fashion, textile, and apparel industry to address its climate and nature impact intensifies, Textile Exchange is redesigning its membership structure to unlock a more targeted course of action for the transition to preferred production systems.

Sarah Needham, Senior Director of Engagement and Partnerships, said: “Our members are fundamental to achieving the progress we want to see. Since the beginning of Textile Exchange, they’ve shown many times what’s possible when the industry works together. Now, this evolved membership structure empowers them to collectively go further, no matter where they are on their sustainability journey.

“By providing targeted guidance and fostering collective action, the structure will enable our community to align behind the shared priorities and direction needed to make measurable change.”

A two-tiered structure designed for change at scale

There will be a phased transition to the new membership structure, which will give organizations the opportunity to join one of two distinct but connected cohorts: Action or Community. This two-tiered structure is designed to better support the distinct needs of different types of organizations working across the industry. It will offer structured pathways, targeted guidance, and practical tools to support coordinated action towards regenerative and resilient production systems, while upholding the ethos and sense of community that have always been an important and valued part of Textile Exchange membership.

The Community Cohort

This cohort is tailored to organizations whose work sits outside direct raw material sourcing or production, but who are still looking to grow their sustainability knowledge and share expertise with peers across the industry. It is particularly suited to academics, non-profits, and solution providers or consultancies, as well as supply chain partners in Tiers 1–3 who do not produce or procure materials themselves.

It offers a self-guided approach, with organizations having access to a global network of like-minded professionals, knowledge-sharing opportunities, learning, events, and expert-developed tools. This cohort closely matches our current membership structure.

The Action Cohort

The Action Cohort is purpose-built for brands, suppliers, and raw material producers that are directly involved in sourcing or producing materials. It is structured to help its members achieve concrete, measurable progress through a shared roadmap to achieving beneficial outcomes for climate, nature, people, and animals.

Joining this cohort provides members with clearly structured action pathways, a standardized progress reporting framework, increased expert guidance, and the opportunity to join collective action initiatives and workshops.

Action Cohort members must commit to tangible steps, from reporting their progress to sourcing or producing through systems that verify best practices, turning intention into implementation. There will also be the opportunity to lead the change, with brands and producers working together through collective action to overcome production system barriers and accelerate progress.

Translating shared ambition to measurable progress

The redefined membership structure reflects Textile Exchange’s five-year strategy to 2030, which aims to advance progress toward climate and nature goals by driving forward the required levels of collective action.

At its core is the creation of an enabling environment for scaling preferred production systems and directly addressing economic barriers, especially for producers at the very start of the supply system. This evolved membership structure is designed to foster such an environment, harnessing the strength of our diverse community while providing clear pathways that align with individual needs and goals.

The full details of the new membership structure will be released in early 2026. Existing members can find out more, including details of a webinar discussing the redefined structure on December 4, at The Hub.



More News from Textile Exchange

#Raw Materials

Textile Exchange publishes cotton Life Cycle Assessment study to strengthen impact data

Textile Exchange has published the first in a series of seven Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) studies designed to improve the quality and robustness of environmental impact data for raw material production across the fashion, textile, and apparel industry. The first LCA study focuses on cotton and addresses critical data gaps and methodology variability through new high-quality data across key producing countries. The study includes organic, regenerative, recycled, and country averages for conventional cotton production systems, providing a clearer picture of the associated environmental impact.

#Sustainability

Textile Exchange unveils commitment-based pathway for members to accelerate responsible raw material production

Textile Exchange has unveiled further details about its new membership structure, designed to guide the fashion, textile, and apparel industry in a collective course of action toward preferred production systems for raw materials and fibers.

#Yarns

Textile Exchange publishes the final criteria for its new Materials Matter Standard, marking a pivotal shift in connecting certification to impact

Textile Exchange has published the final criteria for its Materials Matter Standard—a major milestone in the organization’s multi-year transition toward a unified, impact-driven standards system for raw material production and primary processing. 

#Sustainability

Key takeaways from the 2025 Textile Exchange conference

Brands and retailers, suppliers, innovators, recyclers, farmers, non-profit organizations, and academics convened at Textile Exchange’s Annual Conference, held in the Lisbon Conference Centre.

More News on Sustainability

#Natural Fibers

Global Standard gGmbH launches second public consultation for GRTS Draft 2 for the textile industry (1–30 April 2026)

Global Standard gGmbH is pleased to announce the release of Draft 2 of the Global Responsible Textile Standard (GRTS) for its second public consultation. The consultation will be open from 1 April 2026 to 30 April 2026, inviting stakeholders across the textile and apparel value chain to provide input and contribute to the further development of this new Standard.

#Sustainability

Practical toolkit to drive coordinated climate action launched

An open-access workshop toolkit enables brands, suppliers, policymakers and investors across the textile industry to apply the System Map in their own work, identifying leverage points to halve emissions and enable a just transition.

#Sustainability

Experts publish APAC policy priorities

Cascale today announced the publication of its APAC Policy Priorities Paper, developed by the Asia-Pacific (APAC) Policy Member Expert Team (MET) to identify key regional sustainability challenges and provide practical, aligned recommendations for policymakers and industry stakeholders across Asia-Pacific.

#Sustainability

GOTS version 8.0 released: advanced supply chain accountability, from fibre to finished product

Global Standard is pleased to announce the release of GOTS Version 8.0, the latest update to the world's leading processing standard for organic textiles. The updated Standard strengthens requirements for air emissions and waste management, as well as criteria for product safety. It introduces new provisions on circularity, microfibre management and updates in residue testing. Version 8.0 also elevates due diligence obligations and formalises governance requirements, including ESG disclosure, anti-corruption policies and conflict-of-interest safeguards, to support credible, responsible business conduct.

Latest News

#Raw Materials

New study shows low environmental impact by Cotton made in Africa Organic Cotton from Tanzania

Today, the Aid by Trade Foundation (AbTF) is announcing the results of a comprehensive life-cycle analysis (LCA) for cotton produced in Tanzania under the Cotton made in Africa Organic (CmiA Organic) standard. The study emphasises the small ecological footprint of CmiA Organic verified cotton. This can largely be traced back to the absence of synthetic pesticides, artificial fertilisers, and artificial irrigation. Consequently, CmiA Organic cotton can help the textile industry meet regulatory requirements as well as science-based targets. The results also show that the consequences of climate change threaten the livelihoods of these cotton farmers, even though the type of agriculture they practise barely contributes to climate change.

#Raw Materials

Better Cotton Initiative strengthens regenerative focus in standard update

The Better Cotton Initiative (BCI) has strengthened the regenerative focus of its field-level standard with the launch of a new version of its Principles & Criteria (P&C), which marks the next step in the organisation’s journey to becoming a regenerative standards system.

#Man-Made Fibers

Selenis and Kintra Fibers partner to scale 100% bio-based synthetic fiber technology

Selenis, a leading global specialty polyester manufacturer, today announced a strategic manufacturing partnership with materials science company Kintra Fibers to scale Kintra’s patented fiber-grade PBS resin - a 100% bio-based and biodegradable material designed for textile applications.

#Functional Fabrics

PERFORMANCE DAYS proves its relevance as the industry’s key meeting point

Held on March 18–19, 2026, PERFORMANCE DAYS once again confirmed its position as a leading international platform for functional textiles. A total of 3.366 trade visitors and around 560 exhibitors gathered in Munich, with the event already kicking off successfully on DAY 0, which received highly positive feedback for its interactive format. Despite challenging conditions caused by the public transport strike in Munich, the event saw strong attendance and a consistently high level of activity across both exhibition days.

TOP