According to www.just-style.com, the non-profit Global Fashion Agenda (GFA) launched the GFA Policy Matrix: Asia on May 1, 2026. The tool maps textile sustainability-related legislation across Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Pakistan, Türkiye, and Vietnam — eight countries that collectively supply the majority of the world’s apparel and footwear.
Regional Coverage and Legislative Scope
The Asia Policy Matrix documents current and emerging regulatory developments in four key domains: labour standards, environmental protection, national textile strategies, and circular economy initiatives. It serves as an extension of GFA’s prior regional matrices covering the EU and the Americas, creating a globally consistent framework for tracking policy evolution. All eight Asian countries included are among the top 10 global apparel exporters by value, with Vietnam and Bangladesh alone accounting for over 22% of global garment exports in 2025, per World Trade Organization data.
EU Regulatory Updates Included in Matrix
In parallel with the Asia launch, GFA updated its GFA Policy Matrix: EU to reflect three major developments. First, the amended European Climate Law establishes a legally binding target of a 90% reduction in net greenhouse gas emissions by 2040, effective April 2026. Second, the European Commission’s guidelines on Forced Labour entered consultation in January 2026, with the consultation phase closing in March 2026 and final guidelines scheduled for issuance by mid-June 2026. Third, the EU adopted formal conclusions on its Bioeconomy Strategy — while postponing publication of the European Innovation Act to an undetermined date.
Americas Policy Developments
The GFA Policy Matrix: Americas captures recent chemical regulation shifts, including Peru’s new decree issued in February 2026 to regulate chemical substances using a life-cycle and risk-assessment model. This aligns Peru with Brazil, Chile, and Colombia, all of which have implemented frameworks functionally similar to the EU’s REACH regulation. These four countries now represent the only Latin American nations with REACH-style chemical governance in force or imminent implementation.
Strategic Context and Industry Use
The Matrix is designed for use by brands, suppliers, auditors, and policymakers navigating increasingly complex compliance requirements. For supply chain professionals, it enables proactive risk assessment: for example, Vietnam’s National Action Plan on Circular Economy (2025–2030) mandates mandatory textile waste collection targets starting in Q3 2026, while India’s Plastic Waste Management Amendment Rules (2025) impose extended producer responsibility on synthetic fibre producers from January 2027. According to the report, these national measures directly affect over 14,000 Tier 1 and Tier 2 apparel suppliers operating across the eight countries.
“The launch of the GFA Policy Matrix Asia marks an important step in strengthening our strategic work across the region. As we continue implementing the Circular Fashion Partnerships on the ground, we gain critical insights into what enables circular systems to succeed. This resource complements that experience by mapping textile-related sustainability policies in key manufacturing regions of Asia, where legislation is evolving rapidly.” — Federica Marchionni, CEO, Global Fashion Agenda
The findings will be presented at the Global Fashion Summit: Copenhagen Edition 2026, scheduled for May 5–7, 2026. The summit will convene over 1,200 delegates from 62 countries, including representatives from the European Commission, the International Labour Organization, and 47 multinational fashion brands. Topics include regulatory harmonization, traceability infrastructure gaps, and enforcement capacity in high-volume sourcing countries.
Source: Just Style
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










