Pioneering Sustainability: Tapestry's Decade-Long Commitment to a Greener Future
Embracing Innovation: A Landmark Partnership for Carbon Mitigation
Last month, Tapestry, the corporation overseeing Coach and Kate Spade, announced a significant ten-year alliance with Climeworks, a Swiss company specializing in carbon removal. This decisive action represents a rare long-term commitment to climate solutions, a steadfast dedication that many environmental initiatives often lack. In an era where climate action in the US faces systemic challenges, including policy reversals and funding cuts, such a partnership signals a strong market demand for innovative solutions. Logan Duran, Tapestry's global head of ESG and sustainability, explained to Vogue Business that this collaboration is vital for addressing emissions that are currently unavoidable, emphasizing the need for reliable, enduring carbon removal technologies.
Navigating the Complexities: Why Carbon Removal is Not a Singular Solution
While this partnership is commendable, it's essential to understand its scope and limitations. The initiative primarily targets Tapestry's Scope 1 emissions, yet the fashion industry's largest environmental footprint typically falls under Scope 3, which includes indirect emissions from the supply chain. Furthermore, carbon removal technology itself is still in its nascent stages and remains a subject of debate within environmental circles, often viewed as a last-resort measure rather than a primary solution. Despite these nuances, Tapestry's investment marks a notable advancement for an American fashion company in the current climate, propelled by Duran's successful efforts to establish a compelling business case for sustainability. The company is diligently working to quantify climate-related risks, highlighting the financial repercussions of inaction and positioning sustainability as integral to its long-term viability.
Strategizing for Tomorrow: Identifying and Analyzing Climate-Related Vulnerabilities
In 2022, Duran's team completed its initial climate risk scenario analysis, a methodical process designed to assess how climate change will influence Tapestry's future business landscape. This ongoing, multi-year endeavor, continually refined for accuracy, focuses on two main categories of risk: physical and transitional. Physical risks, such as potential flooding, droughts, or extreme heat at operational sites—ranging from corporate offices and retail outlets to fulfillment centers and supplier facilities—are generally more straightforward to identify. The subsequent iteration of this analysis, slated for completion by the end of 2025, will further deepen their understanding of these direct environmental impacts.
Forecasting Future Impacts: Understanding Transition Risks in a Changing Economy
Assessing transition risks presents a more intricate challenge. This involves projecting how shifts in regulations, raw material costs, and the revenue potential of circular economy models, like upcycling (which has seen success with Tapestry's Coachtopia brand), will affect Tapestry's financial performance. The analysis contrasts scenarios within a low-carbon economy—where the industry rapidly embraces sustainability goals—versus a high-carbon economy, characterized by persistent delays in climate action. Key concerns arising from this assessment include the financial burden of new regulations, often disproportionately borne by suppliers, and the wide-ranging consequences of unpredictable weather patterns. These environmental shifts pose dual threats: they compromise the well-being of factory workers due to extreme conditions and disrupt global supply chains through events like hurricanes and floods, impacting everything from factory access to product transportation efficiency. Duran underscores that the cost of inaction is substantial and ever-increasing, urging continuous investment in solutions to prepare both the company and its suppliers for these evolving challenges.
Integrating Sustainability: From Risk Mapping to Strategic Business Decisions
Duran emphasizes that mapping climate risks is just the initial phase; effectively communicating these findings to key internal stakeholders, securing leadership endorsement, and leveraging the analysis to inform strategic decisions beyond the sustainability department are equally critical. The scenario analysis serves as a powerful tool to demonstrate that environmental, social, and governance (ESG) factors, climate resilience, and risk management are intrinsically linked to the organization's value creation and effective corporate governance. By integrating this analysis into Tapestry's broader enterprise risk management framework, the company ensures widespread understanding and board-level awareness, facilitating strategic long-term decisions concerning its supply chains for the next decade and beyond. This approach also helps convey that climate change is an immediate concern, not a distant future problem. Furthermore, the growing imperative for corporate boards to consider climate risks is driven by frameworks like the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), whose recommendations now inform global regulations such as California's Climate-Related Financial Risk Act (SB261). Investors are also increasingly scrutinizing how climate change will impact companies' financial performance. Tapestry's next endeavor involves comprehensive true cost accounting, which aims to quantify hidden externalities like regulatory costs, overproduction, environmental degradation, and social issues, providing a holistic view of a product's financial impact throughout its entire lifecycle.
Strengthening Bonds: Fostering Enhanced Supplier Collaborations for Sustainable Practices
Such in-depth analysis is only feasible when a company has a well-defined supply chain and cultivates trusting relationships with its suppliers. Three years ago, Tapestry strategically relocated its sustainability team from the legal department to the supply chain function, with Logan Duran now reporting directly to the chief supply chain officer, Peter Charles. This organizational shift places the sustainability team at the forefront of strategic discussions and integrates them with sourcing operations in Asia, allowing for closer engagement with factory-level teams. This direct involvement has significantly accelerated the integration of social and environmental responsibility across the broader supply chain. Beyond daily interactions, Tapestry hosts an annual supplier summit, alternating between China and Southeast Asia. At the most recent event, a substantial portion of the agenda was dedicated to the climate risk scenario analysis, outlining its implications for suppliers and exploring collaborative mitigation and adaptation strategies. Crucially, Tapestry financially supports many of these initiatives, overcoming a major hurdle in scaling supply chain sustainability transformations. The company recently concluded the second cohort of its year-long supplier decarbonization program, guiding 40 top-tier suppliers through detailed energy audits and personalized action plans. For instance, Pungkook Ben Tre (PK) in Vietnam, a key Tier 1 supplier, began installing a rooftop solar system last year, partially funded by Tapestry, aiming to meet approximately 30% of its annual energy needs. Similarly, Simone, another strategic Tier 1 supplier in Vietnam, implemented a rainwater recycling system with Tapestry's support, projected to recycle over 20% of the facility's total water usage in 2025. To further incentivize these efforts, Tapestry has incorporated sustainability metrics into its supplier scorecard, alongside traditional KPIs like on-time delivery, cost, and quality. This ensures that social compliance and environmental performance directly contribute to a supplier's overall score, aligning broader sustainability goals with strategic business differentiation within the supply chain.