Quality clothing reuse exports continue to find active reuse markets overseas, providing affordable clothing to those with lower incomes and prioritising reuse to extend the wearable life of garments. At the same time, the trade generates environmental and social benefits both domestically and overseas.
Domestically, the trade generates around $50 million for social welfare at home with charities getting paid about 50 cents per kilo on export prices. The trade also diverts 100,000 tonnes of wearable/usable clothing for reuse that would otherwise go to landfill in Australia. The only reason these wearable garments can’t be sold domestically is because Australian consumers have a preference (and the purchasing power) to choose and buy newer preloved garments.
Overseas, it creates millions of jobs and helps alleviate poverty and encourage gender equality with many of these jobs going to women involved in resale markets and repair.
The Clothing Reuse Export Accreditation Scheme is now entering its third phase, with overseas audits and foreign end market verification planned for next year. Extending the supply chain visibility, Tier 2 buyers will also be verified at this stage, providing an audit assessment of the material usage figures identified in the second phase. The third phase will also include a robust Modern Slavery element including a key Worker Voice outreach, where we will seek to engage workers directly, through our collaboration with other non-profit organisations both domestically and overseas.
Beyond that, we are working on a rolling 3-year development plan that will ensure that the Clothing Reuse Export Accreditation Scheme is the most ambitious, robust and effective one of its kind globally.