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Discover MoreBy KATE NISHIMURA
Wednesday saw the introduction of a highly-anticipated bipartisan bill aimed at harnessing economic potential across North, Central and South America—and it includes billions of dollars in incentives for circular fashion.
The Americas Act, formally introduced by Senators Michael Bennet (D-Co.) and Bill Cassidy (R-La.), would “establish a regional trade, investment, and people-to-people partnership of countries in the Western Hemisphere to stimulate growth and integration through viable long-term private sector development.”
First teased in draft form last January, the sweeping legislation looks to facilitate the onshoring and reshoring of critical industries while supporting free-trade agreement expansion. It also contains provisions related to enforcement of the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA) and de minimis reform.
Beyond these significant objectives, the bill contains an unprecedented $14 billion in incentives to accelerate domestic circularity and innovation for apparel, footwear, accessories and home textiles. Such business models include reuse, repair, rental, recycling and activities that support those efforts, from collection and sortation of post-consumer goods to technology and reverse logistics.
Section 232 of the bill, entitled “Textile Reuse and Recycling Programs,” includes a 15 percent net income tax exclusion for businesses engaged in any of these activities. It contains $10 billion in loans and $3 billion in grants for programs that carry out reuse and recycling, along with support for those that erect, expand or retrofit manufacturing facilities or provide low-carbon transportation for product collection and drop-off.
Funding is also available in grant or loan form to businesses that provide the inputs, like chemicals, solvents and machinery necessary for transporting, collecting, mailing back, sorting and pre-processing textile products. An additional $1 billion is allocated for research and development related to textile reuse and recycling, while $100 million is earmarked to fund public education.
The American Circular Textiles (ACT) coalition, made up of over a dozen fashion brands, recycling bodies and rental and resale pioneers, worked closely with Senators Bennet and Cassidy to develop Section 232. Rachel Kibbe, CEO of circularity consultancy Circular Services Group and executive director of ACT, said the language was carefully crafted to encompass a broad scope of businesses related to textile circularity, ensuring that any group engaged in advancing the bill’s goals can access its benefits.
ACT pushed for an incentive-based structure rather than the implementation of regulations that would force compliance or institute penalties. “We are an industry group and we wrote this with the industry in mind. It’s not a regulatory bill, so it shouldn’t be fear-inducing,” she told Sourcing Journal. The group has incorporated feedback from across the sector, as well as other trade organizations, into the bill’s verbiage. “We want this to be beneficial for businesses,” she added.
ACT pulled from precedents set by the renewable energy and transportation sectors, which have received both tax breaks and incentives in order to accelerate innovation and drive economies of scale for the past two decades. The coalition first engaged with Congress on the issue of textile circularity in Q1 of 2023. “We spent the whole quarter writing a public policy paper specifically around the issue at hand in the United States with textile waste, and the corresponding opportunity in certain policy levers that could help start to change things,” Kibbe said.
Policymakers had to be brought up to speed on the industry’s current circularity efforts and capabilities, as well as areas of potential. “Reuse, repair and rental are such key tools” in the industry’s fight against waste, and channels that make it possible to facilitate these solutions exist on a commercial scale. Encouraging consumers to engage more with resale, rental and repair through education is a key focus of the law, Kibbe said. By contrast, textile-to-textile recycling remains in its early stages, and will require more time and investment to advance.
A notable provision of the Americas Act is the establishment of a Reshoring and Nearshoring Account controlled by the Secretary of the Treasury, to be funded in part by revenue from de minimis entry. “It creates reciprocity for de minimis and takes those funds and uses them to bolster the economy of the Western hemisphere,” Kibbe said. The funding will go toward strengthening a number of industries within the U.S. and beyond, with the goal of developing infrastructure and creating jobs.
According to Kibbe, the success of the legislation will depend on the buy-in of constituents and consumers. “We can’t sit back” now that the bill has been written, she said, because “90 percent of the battle is public advocacy.” That’s why $100 million is allocated to educational outreach.
“It’s going to be a process that is worked on together as an industry, and across multiple industries,” she said. “It’s going to be full of compromises, as all policy is. But the best thing we can have is consumers saying ‘We want to shop secondhand, we want to shop recycled content, and we want clothes that are made in America—and we are willing to spend money on that.’”
Alon Rotem, chief legal officer for online resale marketplace and ACT coalition member ThredUp, said that with the Americas Act, “policymakers are contemplating circular textiles in federal legislation for the first time, signaling that they’re finally starting to understand the powerful role public sector support can play in lessening fashion’s environmental impact.”
“There is a long history of government action to curb pollutive industries—from plastic bags to electric vehicles—and we believe circular fashion should be the next frontier in sustainable policy,” Rotem added. “We are proud of the work we’re doing to engage policymakers through the American Circular Textiles group, and until fashion is no longer one of the most damaging sectors of the global economy, we will continue to advocate for the government to provide resources that make fashion and textile industries more sustainable and planet-friendly, like the Americas Act.”
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