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Good On You’s Year in Review: Our 2024 Highlights

We are an online community created around a smart and easy to access information hub which is focused on providing proven global and local insights about sustainability

20 Dec, 2024

This post was originally published on Good on You

2024 marked a major moment for Good On You as we expanded into beauty ratings—but we’ve reached many more milestones, too. Here’s what the Good On You team achieved this year.

Good On You evolved in 2024

Anyone in the sustainability space will tell you that 2024 has been a tough year. Challenging economies and uncertainty about what new governments and legislation will mean for the climate and sustainable business in 2025 have made for a tumultuous period—and McKinsey’s annual State of Fashion report predicts it’s not going to get easier, at least in the short term. But through it all, Good On You has remained steadfast in its mission to help you make better choices, and support brands in working more sustainably. Here are our milestones from 2024.

Good On You launched beauty brand ratings

The headline this year? In October 2024, we issued an urgent call for improvement in beauty sustainability with the launch of beauty brand ratings and the first industry-wide study into brand sustainability initiatives.

Its findings revealed that brands are lagging in their efforts to minimise impacts on people, the planet, and animals, and to provide the transparency that consumers have a right to. Even when beauty brands are transparent, “there’s a shocking amount of information that’s not disclosed about where all of our products come from—and even the specific ingredients that go in them,” writes editor-at-large JD Shadel.  The industry took notice, too, and you might’ve seen coverage by the Financial TimesVogue Business, and Business of Fashion, among other outlets that reported on the news.

We made waves in physical retail with the launch of the Sustainable Retail Index in partnership with URW

Our partnership with Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield (URW)—the operators of Westfield in the EU and US—reached new heights in 2024 as we co-created the Sustainable Retail Index (SRI), an industry-pioneering tool powered by Good On You’s rich brand sustainability data. The SRI will provide URW with a unified way to support its retailer tenants in their sustainability transitions and track their performances, and to meet consumer expectations for more responsible choices throughout its destinations. In creating the SRI, our analysts rated more than 1,000 fashion brands in just eight weeks, we launched beauty ratings, and are working on three new retail verticals.

Our monthly industry newsletter is bringing insights to a new audience

In November, we launched a new monthly digest to bring retailers, innovative brands, and industry insiders access to new ratings data, thought leadership from voices in fashion and beauty, actionable tips, and the latest industry news. We kicked off with an essay from our co-founder Sandra Capponi, who shared her experience with the ongoing transparency crisis and what brands can do to avoid it. Want to get these insights in your inbox? Sign up here.

We’re mentoring the next generation of designers in partnership with the British Fashion Council

Helping the industry do better is the heart of our mission, and we’ve partnered with the British Fashion Council to guide emerging fashion brands as part of the organisation’s NEWGEN programme. We’ll be helping NEWGEN recipients finesse their sustainability approaches by offering access to our team of experts and our Good Measures hub, providing a 360-degree view of their impacts and tailored tips for improvement.

Our reporting asked big questions

We published 193 articles in 2024 and partnered with some of the industry’s most prominent voices to bring you original reporting. Writer Maggie Zhou quizzed SHEIN and Temu directly about their alleged copyright infringement, while journalist Sophie Benson investigated why it’s so hard to find out what ingredients are in our beauty products, journalist Megan Doyle interviewed those spearheading physical retail’s transformation into a place for circularity, and activist Emma Håkansson examined what cruelty-free claims in the beauty industry really mean. And we harnessed our ratings analysts’ expertise to help you understand why cultural sustainability is so important and what good—and bad—sustainability reporting looks like.

We released our annual climate change report, the largest survey of its kind in the industry

For the past two years, we’ve collaborated with journalist Sophie Benson on our deep data reports for the world’s annual climate conference, COP. For COP29, Benson looked at new data on more than 5,800 brands’ environmental track records and highlighted the fashion industry’s ongoing lack of urgency regarding the climate emergency.

We scaled up our business tools to help more brands do better

This year, we did a full redesign of the Good On You Ratings Dashboard to give our enterprise partners instant access to a credible assessment of the fashion and beauty brands they work with on the most critical sustainability issues. It includes the Ratings API, too, so developers can incorporate our ratings easily into existing platforms and websites to power decision-making and help consumers make better choices. Alongside that, our network of “Good” and “Great” affiliate brands continues to thrive, and we grew our publisher network to over 100 members, helping them to share top-rated brands with their audiences and scaling up our collective impact.

We contributed to the most important conferences and forums

Every year, Good On You’s founders actively participate in crucial industry forums, to further our commitment to transparency and accountability. From the Marie Claire Awards to the Textile Exchange board, our involvement affirmed our role as thought leaders, advocates, and champions of change in fashion and beauty.

 

2024 in numbers

2024 statistics for good on you

Most searched brands in 2024

most searched brands on good on you 2024 - shein, nike, and h&m

All in all, it’s been another fantastic year for Good On You, and it’s all down to you.

So thank you. Thank you for your support and for helping us change the fashion—and now beauty—industries for the better, even when times are tough. We couldn’t do what we do without you, and we can’t wait to see what next year has in store for us and the sustainability movement as a whole. We’re so glad to have you here as we head into 2025—our decade anniversary!

Want to learn more about Good On You’s milestones? Check out our 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023 highlights.

 

The post Good On You’s Year in Review: Our 2024 Highlights appeared first on Good On You.

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Unlocking Potential: How USAID Partnerships Enable Access to Climate Adaptation Finance

Unlocking Potential: How USAID Partnerships Enable Access to Climate Adaptation Finance

Unlocking Potential: How USAID Partnerships Enable Access to Climate Adaptation Finance
jschoshinski
Wed, 12/18/2024 – 17:45

This blog is the second in a series highlighting USAID Climate Adaptation Support Activity (CASA) support for the African Adaptation Initiative (AAI). The first blog explored the adaptation climate finance gap and CASA’s partnerships to build technical capacity for accredited entities to apply for funding from the Green Climate Fund (GCF).
Climate change is exacerbating existing vulnerabilities and threatening the livelihoods of millions of people around the globe. Africa is facing disproportionate impacts, with threats to food security, ecosystems, and economies fueling displacement and worsening the threat of conflict over limited resources across the region. Countries have articulated their priorities for addressing these climate risks in national policies and commitments.
USAID’s CASA supports the AAI to unlock critical adaptation funds from the GCF. In 2024, CASA continued this work by helping accredited entities apply for funding from GCF. Managed by national and sub-national governments, development banks, and other eligible institutions, these funds will enhance the region’s resilience to climate shocks and stressors.
The GCF is the world’s largest fund for mitigation and adaptation in developing countries. The Fund has committed 50 percent of adaptation finance to Least Developed Countries, Small Island Developing States, and African countries, representing 25 percent of overall GCF funds. Despite this commitment, eligible African entities, like national development banks, often need more technical capacity to complete the rigorous accreditation and proposal requirements to access the funding allocated to them.  
AAI strengthens collaboration on adaptation through high-level pan-African and regional dialogues, large-scale adaptation action on the ground, and efforts to bridge the adaptation financing gap. With support from CASA, AAI collaborates with economist Sandra Freitas and her team of over 70 experts at SSA to build the capacity of African institutions to access GCF adaptation finance.
In 2024, CASA worked with AAI and the Sustainable Solutions for Africa (SSA) to develop the Adaptation Finance Academy, a structured training program covering GCF policies and procedures to build technical skills in climate analysis and modeling, financial structuring, economic impact assessments, and environmental and social safeguarding. This December, CASA and SSA will host the first Academy, bringing in more than 50 experts from up to 25 countries for two weeks of training.  
The GCF proposal requires at least 22 annexes. You need climate scientists to do the climate rationale, project analysis, someone who understands GCF policies and asset modalities and templates, a project developer, financial technicians, and experts in whichever sector you are pursuing, from infrastructure to energy to agriculture. We have accepted the complexities of the climate finance ecosystem and are now focused on building capacity to work within these frameworks. We want to invest time and energy training the experts so they can thrive in the existing reality.
Sandra Freitas

Freitas’ team also provides on-demand support to GCF-accredited entities and government leaders to design and develop robust climate finance proposals. If these institutions successfully apply for GCF funding, it will help ensure that climate adaptation finance is more equitably distributed and programming decisions are made by the regions and countries most affected. 
“We hope that after the Academy, they can return to their home countries equipped to develop a funding proposal or concept note because we have demonstrated how it can be done. It’s complex, but it’s not impossible.”  
In Senegal, Freitas’ team works closely with one institution to develop a proposal to launch a climate-smart agriculture facility. This facility will establish a credit line to support smallholder farmers who are highly vulnerable to climate change and face challenges accessing finance. With GCF funding, the facility will provide financing, technical assistance, and capacity-building services to enhance agricultural productivity while reducing greenhouse gas emissions. 
Ultimately, this collaboration between USAID, AAI, and their technical partners demonstrates that a relatively small upfront investment in technical training and capacity building can enable countries to better anticipate, plan for, and respond to future climate challenges.

Teaser Text
USAID’s CASA supports the AAI to unlock critical adaptation funds from the GCF. In 2024, CASA continued this work by helping accredited entities apply for funding from GCF

Publish Date
Wed, 12/18/2024 – 12:00

Author(s)

Hannah Blair

Hero Image
Ghana_PSE.JPG

Blog Type
Blog Post

Strategic Objective

Adaptation

Region

Africa

Topic

Adaptation
Agriculture
Climate
Climate Finance
Climate Strategy Implementation
Locally-Led Development
Resilience

Country

Senegal

Sectors

Adaptation
Climate Finance

Projects

Climate Adaptation Support Activity (CASA)

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