Swiss clothing retailers have been urged to sign up with Bangladesh’s Accord. Five years after the Rana Plaza factory collapse that killed 1,138 textile workers in Bangladesh, 145 international brands signed up with Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh. Only one of them is Swiss and that is the teen clothier Tally Weij, which joined Accord in 2014.
Bangladesh is the fourth leading source of clothing imported into Switzerland. Swiss retailer Coop sells various brands of clothing and soft furnishings. It says its few own-label textiles come from a handful of carefully selected suppliers in Bangladesh and that it has always taken responsibility for implementing sustainability standards directly.
Similarly, Swiss outdoor label Mammut says it’s systematically committed to the comprehensive improvement of working conditions and occupational safety. Mammut says it has built up a substantial control and management system over the past ten years. Neither Coop nor Mammut is a part of Accord.
Accord is the world’s first legally binding measure to improve workplace safety for garment workers. Under Accord, inspection teams have screened over 1,600 factories and identified more than 1,18,500 dangers related to fire safety, electrical installations and structural issues. Some 83 per cent of these problems have been resolved.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
Bharat Tex 2026: Redefining the global textile value chain
Union Minister of Textiles, Giriraj Singh, has officially unveiled Bharat Tex 2026, signaling a significant leap in India’s influence over... Read more
Intertextile Shanghai Spring 2026: A hub for global textile innovation
The textile industry’s pulse is quickening as Intertextile Shanghai Apparel Fabrics – Spring Edition prepares to open its doors from... Read more
Moscow Fashion Week 2026: Blending sustainable innovation with timeless glamour
Scheduled to run from March 14-19, 2026 in Moscow, Russia, the Moscow Fashion Week (MFW) is cementing its status as... Read more
The Store as Stage: How fashion is crafting immersive consumer worlds
The North American fashion retail sector in 2026 is shedding its product-first identity and shifting towards a model that values... Read more
Turning the supply chain upside down, on-demand production reshapes apparel
The global fashion industry, long celebrated for its creativity and scale, is facing a structural reckoning. For decades, retailers and... Read more
Intertex Milano 2026 - A global nexus for textile innovation
Intertex Milano is set to return this summer, confirming its status as a premier international destination for the textile and... Read more
Primark at crossroads as AB Foods weighs spin-off amid digital and Lefties press…
The long-standing supremacy of Europe’s budget fashion champion, Primark, is facing a test. As of February 2026, Associated British Foods... Read more
Vietnam, Bangladesh, Cambodia drive US apparel imports in 2025
The 2025 year-end data for the US apparel sector reveals an industry in structural flux. Despite aggressive tariff measures and... Read more
The New Dress Code: Sportswear’s takeover of modern wardrobes
For much of the last decade, fashion retail has been defined by volatility. Trends have shortened, discount cycles have intensified... Read more
Hemp finds its moment in India’s $500 billion American trade calculus
In the grand arithmetic of India’s expanding trade engagement with the US, the headlines usually gravitate toward oil cargoes, aircraft... Read more












