Major brands have decided to improve conditions at their factories in Bangladesh. These include Primark, H&M, Zara and Massimo Dutti.
The agreement will cover more than 1000 factories in Bangladesh and up to two million garment workers. The agreement adds protection for workers who lobby for safer working conditions and extends factory inspections to cover spinning mills as well as washing and dying facilities.
Bangladesh is home to about four million garment workers, who make cheap, throwaway fashion items and household goods for export to big-name stores. Many of the factories draw criticism for offering a regime of scant worker rights, lax safety standards, long hours and poor pay.
A culture of throwaway fashion means stores put value over quality and sell overly cheap clothes to wealthy consumers at a high cost to the people who make them.
Global fashion retailers say they have come together to protect workers in developing nations and ensure the safety of buildings. There has also been legislation to ensure greater supply chain transparency.
The previous Bangladesh Accord, signed in 2013, paved the way for fire, electrical and structural safety inspections in more than 1,500 factories and set out plans for the installation of fire doors and stronger buildings.
But nearly four years on, more than 80 per cent of factories are running late on renovations.

- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
Zara’s precision retail model leaves global competitors drowning in inventory
The global apparel sector is currently grappling with a punishing inventory overhang, yet Inditex, the parent company of Zara, has... Read more
Beyond the mall collapse, the profit push driving 2026 retail closures
The American retail sector has entered 2026 in the midst of one of its most impactful recalibrations in decades. Over... Read more
Status, Rewired: Health, AI and experience are displacing heritage luxury
The global luxury industry is not facing a demand fall it is confronting a redefinition of value. As bellwethers like... Read more
No More Easy Wins: Why global retailers are losing ground in China
China’s retail sector has entered a new phase, one defined not by aspiration, but by scrutiny. The long-standing advantage enjoyed... Read more
India’s 45°C economy is reshaping apparel retail and consumer spending
The intensifying heatwaves sweeping across the Indian subcontinent are no longer mere meteorological anomalies; they have become the primary engineers... Read more
FY26 Textile Scorecard: Integration, specialization are winning the margin battl…
As the curtains close on FY2025-26, India’s textile industry is revealing a sharp divide. On one side stand integrated and... Read more
Intertextile Shenzhen 2026: Pioneering the Future of Textile Innovation
As Shenzhen cements its status as China’s premier hub for manufacturing, artificial intelligence, and startup cultivation, Intertextile Shenzhen Apparel Fabrics... Read more
The Devil Wears Prada 2 reflects fashion’s power shift, where consumers replace …
" " The release of The Devil Wears Prada 2 has sparked a debate far bigger than a Hollywood sequel. What... Read more
The 30-minute problem reshaping the $63 bn leggings market
The global leggings makers are racing to solve one of the apparel industry’s most expensive hidden problems: discomfort that appears... Read more
Why the resale explosion is failing to slow apparel production
The global apparel industry is confronting an uncomfortable paradox. The explosive rise of the resale economy, once viewed as a... Read more












