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More Sustainable Clothing Brands: The 50 Top-Rated Brands on Good On You

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

12 Jun, 2024

This post was originally published on Good on You

Our editors curate highly rated brands that are first assessed by our rigorous ratings system. Buying through our links may earn us a commission—supporting the work we do. Learn more.

 

Every year, we review the 50 brands that’ve received the highest ratings against our world-leading methodology to give you a comprehensive understanding of who’s doing the most in the industry. But before we get into 2024’s exciting line-up, let’s rewind…

What is Good On You all about?

Since 2015, Good On You has been leading the way in the more sustainable fashion space. First and foremost, we are a brand ratings platform. We rate brands on the environmental impact, labour rights, and animal welfare issues that matter, awarding them an easy-to-understand score from 1 “We Avoid” through to 5 “Great” for each area. We give them an overall score, too.

We believe fashion brands should be responsible for and transparent about their impact. We help to answer questions about how the clothes you’re wearing were made, and whether your favourite brands are doing everything they can to avoid harmful impacts on people, the planet, and animals.

Our ratings system is the most comprehensive in the world that addresses issues across the environment, people, and animals. We collect over 1000 data points per brand across all the key sustainability issues, bringing together a wide range of indicators, ratings, certifications, and standards systems. As of right now, there are thousands of brands listed on our web directory, and in our app.

What makes a brand more sustainable and ethical?

It’s all well and good to say a brand is more ethical and sustainable, but what does that mean in practice? Simply put, a more ethical and sustainable brand makes sure it positively impacts people, the planet, and animals. Here’s an overview of what we look at in each pillar:

Labour conditions

Our people pillar refers to all the hands that touch a garment before it gets to you. From the farmers harvesting the cotton to the workers dyeing fabric and the people packing your orders. A responsible brand ensures its workers are treated fairly across the entire supply chain. This includes policies and practices on child labour, forced labour, supplier contracts, worker voice, gender equality, diversity, the right to join a union, and payment of a living wage.

Environmental impact

For the planet, we want to ensure brands are doing their best to protect the Earth in their production processes. More sustainable brands care about their use of resources and energy, reduce their carbon emissions and impact on our waterways, forests, and biodiversity, and use and dispose of chemicals safely. They incorporate a high proportion of lower-impact materials like linen and recycled cotton, certified by trusted names like the Global Organic Textile Standard (GOTS).

Animal welfare

The welfare of animals is crucial. Non-human animals are sentient beings we share the planet with and deserve to be treated with respect and, ideally, left alone altogether. A cruelty-free brand uses no or very few animal products, which include wool, leather, fur, angora, down feather, shearling, karakul, and exotic animal skin and hair. Only brands that are 100% vegan are awarded our “Great” score for animals.

Finding more sustainable clothing brands has never been easier

Whether you’re a sustainable fashion aficionado or are new to the sphere, it’s helpful to have a list of brands whose sustainability claims have been rigorously assessed for you. As more brands than ever are celebrating the sustainable practices they have in place, it can be difficult to determine which of those claims have substance and which are just greenwashing—particularly when it comes to fast fashion giants. What’s more, finding brands that meet your needs and values can also present a challenge.

But that’s why Good On You exists. We’ve done the hard work for you and researched, rated, and rounded up the 50 top-scoring more sustainable clothing brands from around the world in this guide. A few brands have made it to the top of our ratings again this year, including “Great” labels Etiko, MUD Jeans, Armedangels, LA Relaxed, Mila.Vert, People Tree, Dedicated, No Nasties, Triarchy, Nudie Jeans, Culthread, Fair Indigo, Citizen Wolf, and Swedish Stockings.

Scroll on to discover the top 50 brands on Good On You, or search the page by region. We hope you meet your new favourite brand.

 

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ACCIONA creates surfboard from retired wind turbine blades

ACCIONA creates surfboard from retired wind turbine blades

ACCIONA has partnered with Australian professional surfer Josh Kerr and his brand Draft Surf, to create surfboards made from a retired wind turbine blade.

The initial range, crafted from a decommissioned blade from ACCIONA’s Waubra wind farm in Victoria, included 10 prototype surfboards as part of the company’s Turbine Made initiative.

The surfboards, hand-crafted on the Gold Coast, feature repurposed turbine blade strips built into the deck for strength and flex control. The fins of the board, made from recycled fibreglass, are said to provide stability, drive and speed, and the outer shell is further strengthened by incorporating recycled turbine blade particulate into the fibreglassing process.

Kerr said, “When ACCIONA approached us about being part of the solution and working together to create these surfboards, we jumped at the opportunity. At its core, our brand is about enabling the best surfing experience with quality products, in a sustainable way — which aligns with ACCIONA’s vision for Turbine Made.”

Draft Surf founder Josh Kerr with an ACCIONA Turbine Made surfboard prototype.

Launched in February 2025, Turbine Made is an initiative dedicated to exploring ways to transform decommissioned wind turbine blades into new materials and products. It represents the next step in ACCIONA’s efforts to advance circular economy in the renewable energy sector in Australia.

ACCIONA Energia’s global sustainability director Mariola Domenech said, “We know that in the next five to 10 years, countries like Australia will have a large volume of decommissioned wind turbine blades, so we’re acting now to explore new ways to recycle and reuse the material they are built from.

“The creation of a surfboard prototype, developed locally, is an example of how we’re reimagining the materials from decommissioned turbine blades and pushing the envelope of innovation when it comes to the circular economy.”

The Turbine Made initiative builds on ACCIONA’s previous work to repurpose decommissioned wind turbine blades. This includes a collaboration with European fashion brand El Ganso, to create sneakers featuring recycled blade material in their soles and integrating recycled blade materials into the torsion beams of solar trackers at a solar plant in Extremadura, Spain.

The company is also advancing in end-of-life turbine recycling through the development of a blade recycling plant in Navarra, Spain, which is set to become operational in 2026, creating 100 jobs and a processing capacity of 6000 tonnes of material per year.

“Sustainability isn’t just about reducing waste, it’s about product stewardship, ensuring that what we build today doesn’t become tomorrow’s environmental challenge,” Domenech said.

“By working with Australian manufacturers, designers and innovators, we can encourage the creation of practical, high-performance applications that benefit both industry and the environment.”

Top image caption: Professional surfer Josh Kerr holding an ACCIONA Turbine Made x Draft Surf surfboard prototype. Images: Supplied.

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