Asos annual carbon report highlights emissions reductions

For its 2020 financial year, September 2019 to August 2020, British fashion e-tailer ASOS has reported a 21% year-on-year reduction in operational carbon emissions per order.

Asos reports a 13% reduction in absolute (total) operational carbon emissions throughout the reporting year, referring to emissions created in the operation of its business, such as offices, incoming goods, client deliveries, and returns, in its annual Carbon Report.

As the number of orders fulfilled by Asos increased over time, the percentage decrease in emissions per order (21%) was larger than the total reduction in emissions (13%).

According to Asos, several key projects drove emissions reductions, including the move to more localized fulfillment through the launch of Asos’ Atlanta fulfillment center in 2019; prioritizing sea or road freight over air freight for inbound products; switching to renewable energy for 3-quarters of Asos’ global electricity consumption footprint across all sites; and further enhancing recycled plastic content in packaging.

Asos also mentions that the progress made in the previous year, after the successful implementation of Asos’ Carbon 2020 plan, has resulted in a 45% reduction in emissions per order compared to the 2015 baseline.

Asos chief executive, Nick Beighton, said that they’re very pleased with what their teams have accomplished against such adversity. A 21% reduction in operational carbon emissions per orders year over year is a remarkable accomplishment that demonstrates their efforts to decouple their growth from their carbon footprint are paying off. They know there’s more work to be done in this area, and they’re excited to provide more information about it soon.

Asos pledged to achieve net-zero emissions across its whole supply chain by 2040 when it signed up to the British Retail Consortium’s Climate Action Roadmap last year. Beighton stated in the article that Asos will shortly be releasing new, science-based objectives in support of its 2040 promise, ahead of the release of integrated emissions statistics for the company’s complete supply chain.

Recent Posts

Eastman launches Naia Lyte for lightweight, high-performance fabrics

Eastman introduced Naia™ Lyte, a new cellulose acetate filament yarn, at the Intertextile Shanghai Apparel Fabrics Spring/Summer 2026 exhibition.

8 hours ago

Ecco, Spinnova develop shoe using leather by-product fibers

Ecco, Spinnova have introduced the Ecco BIOM 720 shoe. This product is unique as it uses leather by-products that are…

8 hours ago

Xefco deploys first waterless plasma dyeing system

Xefco has deployed its Ausora system, marking the first time a waterless plasma textile dyeing machine has been deployed at…

8 hours ago

trinamiX to use NIR technology for supply chain transparency

trinamiX is helping manufacturers, recyclers, sorters, and brands improve material identification through its mobile near-infrared spectroscopy technology.

1 day ago

Bezos Earth Fund to develop next-gen materials for fashion industry

The Bezos Earth Fund has announced an investment of $34 million to support the development of new materials for the…

1 day ago

STCH to launch Fabric GPT for innovative fabric development

STCH is working on a system called “fabric GPT.” This tool is trained on large amounts of data related to…

1 day ago