Textile Tracer Assessment

Textile Tracer Assessment

This project involved a detailed analysis and assessment of physical tracer technologies for the textile industry, aimed at improving the traceability of fibres and materials across the supply chain. It evaluated forensic and additive tracers as solutions to verify the origins of materials and strengthen transparency in the textile supply chain.

Problem Statement

The textile industry faces challenges in verifying the origin of fibres and materials across the supply chain, leading to transparency issues and a risk of false sustainability claims. Existing verification systems (site-level, transaction-level) fall short of providing material-level traceability, making it hard to prevent issues like counterfeiting and material substitution.

Executive Summary

The Textile Tracer Assessment provided a first-of-its-kind benchmark for physical tracer technologies in the textile industry. It categorises tracer technologies into forensic and additive tracers and evaluates their application in verifying the origins and authenticity of textile fibres. The report encourages the use of these technologies to enhance supply chain traceability and transparency, aligning with sustainability goals. It identifies use-cases for implementing tracer solutions, such as verifying recycled fibres and ensuring sustainable sourcing.

Goals of the Project

  • Benchmark physical tracer technologies for fibre traceability.

  • Enable the identification of appropriate tracer technologies based on specific use cases.

  • Support the development of supply chain transparency and sustainability through tracer technology adoption.

  • Provide guidance on implementing tracer technologies alongside digital traceability systems.

  • Facilitate the use of tracers in recycling processes to verify sustainable fibre content.

Project Results

  • Analysis of 17 tracer companies, resulting in two primary categories: Forensic Tracers (geographic verification) and Additive Tracers (material-level verification).

  • Successful identification of technologies that can be used across different tiers of the textile supply chain.

  • Key insights into the operational feasibility of using tracers for synthetic fibres and recycled materials.

  • Recommendations for combining physical tracer technologies with digital traceability efforts for comprehensive supply chain transparency.

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