New report warns nine out of ten fashion brands exposed to prohibited cotton

Date:

Global supply chain verification firm Oritain’s inaugural 2026 Global Supply Chain Intelligence Report found that 90% of brands analysed, showed exposure to prohibited cotton in 2025, up sharply from 64% the previous year, despite widespread investment in traceability programmes.

Brands are struggling to match rising transparency regulations with meaningful action, highlighting weaknesses in the global supply chain, the new report has revealed.

According to the report, nearly 94% of UK businesses and 87% of US firms surveyed now trace their cotton supply chains, but Oritain argues that documentation alone is no longer enough to guarantee compliance or build consumer trust.

The report describes a growing verification gap between what businesses believe is happening in their supply chains and what forensic testing can actually prove.

Using a multi-year sampling programme analysing around 1,000 garments across 40 brands annually, Oritain said exposure to cotton prohibited by legislation had returned to pre-2021 levels after several years of improvement.

Meanwhile the data shows consumer scepticism is also intensifying, with 60% of shoppers now actively avoiding products linked to untrusted origins, while just 3% trust marketing claims alone, according to the research.

“The data tells a clear story: risk isn’t disappearing, it is re-emerging,” said Oritain CEO Alyn Franklin.
“As brands pivot manufacturing regions they’re finding that upstream material exposure hasn’t gone away, it is increasingly appearing in other key manufacturing hubs.”

“The report argues that supply chain assurance models based on paperwork and periodic audits are becoming increasingly inadequate in a more enforcement-led environment,” Retail Gazette informed.

Oritain said brands are facing rising operational risks including border delays, financial penalties and supply disruption, with 80% of UK brands surveyed reporting material impacts linked to sourcing issues.

Looking ahead, the company is calling for wider adoption of forensic verification technologies. It is understood these include isotope and trace element analysis, in a bid to independently confirm product origins across industries including fashion, leather, timber, coffee and dairy.

The report also found growing consumer demand for stronger proof of ethical sourcing, such as 69% supporting mandatory verification requirements for leather products.

Image courtesy: Business Recorder

Bhargav Pathak
Bhargav Pathakhttps://textilesresources.com
With a passion for the textile, apparel, and fashion industry, I embarked on a journey fueled by education from NIFT Gandhinagar and affiliation with NDBI at NID Ahmedabad. Since 2006, I've contributed to various corporate ventures, specializing in B2B, B2C, SaaS, and AI products within the textile domain. In July 2023, I launched TextilesResources.com, a knowledge hub offering the latest news, articles, and soon-to-come features like interviews and a trade fair calendar. Grateful for the growing community, we've recently introduced a Business Directory for enhanced visibility. Join us on LinkedIn and stay connected with the ever-evolving textile landscape!

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_imgspot_imgspot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Zimmer Austria displaying next-generation innovations at ITM 2026

Zimmer Austria will display its next-generation innovations in screen...

Competitiveness vital for Bangladesh garment sector after LDC graduation: Commerce Minister

There is a necessity to maintain a competitive edge...

Uzbek textile & garments sector aims for $4bn exports in 2026

Uzbekistan’s textile and garment exports reached $2.6 billion in...

Arvind launches UAE subsidiary & opens London Design Hub

Arvind Ltd which is a textile-to-retail conglomerate has launched...