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As the climate crisis, biodiversity loss, and land degradation escalate at alarming speeds, it’s about time to move beyond sustainable fashion and embrace regenerative fashion.

What is Regenerative Fashion?

First let’s back up and define regenerative.

As Rainforest Alliance explains “regenerative agriculture is an ancient concept that originated with Indigenous peoples around the world more than a thousand years ago. In many Indigenous world views, humans and nature are not separate forces, but parts of a whole that need each other to thrive. Regenerative agriculture supports this by promoting farming methods that enrich the land—so it can continue to provide for present and future generations.”

Specifically, as Regeneration International outlines, “regenerative agriculture describes farming and grazing practices that, among other benefits, reverse climate change by rebuilding soil organic matter and restoring degraded soil biodiversity — resulting in both carbon drawdown and improvements in the water cycle.”

So rather than focusing on doing less bad or having a reduced negative impact, regenerative puts the focus on doing more good and creating a positive impact by improving the land, revitalizing the soil, restoring nutrients, and capturing carbon from the atmosphere and into the soil. (While the atmosphere has far too much carbon, our soil actually has far too little carbon — in fact, our soil has lost about 50–70% of its original carbon content.)

As Rebecca Burgess of Fibershed puts it, “carbon is a finite resource that moves through soils, oceans, food, fibers and the atmosphere — and ancient carbon is fossilized in Earth’s core. There is no more carbon entering or leaving Earth — we are simply seeing the effects of having too much of it in the wrong place.

How Can Fashion Be Regenerative?

Natural fibers used in the clothing and textile industry — whether they’re animal-based or plant-based — come from the land. So when the fiber is grown or the fiber-producing animal is raised as part of a regenerative system, then that fiber is then part of that regenerative system.

For example, if a cotton farmer is using regenerative, holistic management practices (such as cover crops, crop rotation, no-till, composting, and pasture cropping) to grow their cotton, that cotton could be considered regenerative cotton, just like when a cotton farmer using organic practices, they can call their cotton organic cotton.

How to Identify (and Verify) Regenerative Fashion

As with any green or green-adjacent term in the sustainable fashion space, there is inevitably going to be greenwashing. How can you tell if it’s the real deal when a brand says that they are (or a collection they have) is regenerative?

Fibershed Member or Climate Beneficial™ Verified

The leader in regenerative fashion and fibers is Fibershed, a nonprofit organization based in California that is building regenerative fiber systems through research, education, events, and partnerships. The organization has built out a large network of farmers, ranchers, land managers, ecologists, mill operators, spinners, natural dyes, filters, designers, sewers, and knitters to advance regenerative and regional fiber systems.

Fibershed has a Climate Beneficial™ verification, which is given to brands using fibers that come from landscapes where carbon farming practices are being used.

Climate Beneficial™ was first used for wool from sheep who grazed on grassland and helped enhance carbon storage in the soil. Fibershed has also partnered with fashion brands, like Reformation to explore what it looks like to grow Climate Beneficial™ Cotton in California as well.

Regenerative Organic Certified®

Regenerative Organic Certified® is a seal overseen by Regenerative Organic Alliance and it certifies farms, ranches, brands, and products. To achieve this certification, entities must already hold a USDA organic certification, or equivalent international organic certification.

Beyond being certified organic, entities must follow criteria within the following pillars from ROC’s framework: Soil Health & Land Management, Animal Welfare, and Farmer & Worker Fairness.

In addition to food and beverage products, there are several fashion and textile companies in ROC’s brand and product directory.

Savory Institute’s Land to Market Program

Land to Market is another program with member brands and verified products ensuring that a particular product — whether it’s a food item or a textile piece — was made with practices that “are healing the planet instead of degrading it.”

The program counts some of the world’s largest fashion companies, like UGG, Kering (which owns Gucci and Saint Laurent) and Tapestry (which owns Coach) among its’ members.

Important to note: just because a brand is a Land to Market member, it does not mean that all of their products meet the Land to Market standards. In fact for some of the larger companies, they may only have the verification on a tiny portion of their products.

Where to Find Regenerative Fashion

There are a few pioneering brands bringing clothing made with Climate Beneficial™ fibers to the market, several brands partnering with Fibershed to create more regional fiber systems, as well as some fashion brands securing the Regenerative Organic Certified® label for several of their products.

This curated guide of regenerative fashion brands includes companies that have made a substantial commitment to regenerative sourcing. You may find more brands with a collection here or there made with regenerative fibers, but these brands have been a long-term commitment to regenerative fashion.

Note that the guide contains affiliate links. As always, we only feature brands that meet strict criteria for sustainability we love, that we think you’ll love too!

1. Christy Dawn

Categories: Dresses, Tees, and Slip Skirts

Christy Dawn has been investing in regenerative cotton with Oshadi Collective — a close partner with Fibershed — in India for several years. (I interviewed the founder of Oshadi in a podcast episode about how the producer is building a seed-to-sew supply chain that restores the earth and centers equity.)

The slow fashion brand also sources regenerative silk for their formal dresses. Each piece is digitally printed or traditionally block printed with natural or even organic dyes.

Blue floral regenerative cotton dress from Christy Dawn

2. Maggie’s Organics

Categories: Basics and Loungewear

For over three decades, Maggie’s Organics has been going above and beyond to ensure their products are made responsibly. The Michigan-based organic fashion company now has a growing selection of basics — from tees to sweatshirts — made with Regenerative Organic Certified® cotton. Maggie’s Organics is also a World Fair Trade Organization member and is verified by the Fair Trade Federation.

Certified regenerative organic green sweatshirt from Maggie's Organics

3. Harvest & Mill

Categories: Basics, Loungewear, Socks

Harvest & Mill is a Fibershed Member with basics like socks, tees, and joggers made with USA-grown and milled organic cotton. The brand has many undyed pieces, like unbleached white as well as heirloom brown grown cotton and tan-green grown cotton.

All of Harvest & Mill’s pieces are independently sewn in Oakland, Berkeley, and San Francisco.

Beige tee and sweatpants made with regenerative materials

4. Eileen Fisher

Categories: Jackets & Sweaters, Coats, Skirts & Pants, Tops & Vests

Eileen Fisher has foundational wardrobe staples designed to last made with regenerative wool sourced from ranchers in Argentina committed to restoring depleted grasslands.

The slow fashion brand is a brand partner with Land to Market and has been selling regenerative wool products for many years, demonstrating their long-term commitment to helping to build a regenerative fashion system.

Gray sweater made with regenerative wool

5. California Cloth Foundry

Categories: Basics & Loungewear

Slow fashion brand California Cloth Foundry is a Fibershed Soil to Soil Partner that creates loungewear from earth-friendly natural fibers like regenerative hemp, Climate Beneficial wool, Cleaner Cotton™, organic cotton, and Lenzing Modal®.

CCF also uses natural dyes and finishes. The colors for their pieces are achieved by botanically dyeing the fabric with plants like weld and madder, brightening the fabrics with hydrogen peroxide, or leaving the fabric undyed. The brand ships their earth-minded pieces in compostable materials and vegetable-based inks.

Regenerative clothing from California Cloth Foundry

6. Housework

Categories: Sweaters, Basics, Loungewear

Housework is a Fibershed Partner that collaborates with designers and artisans to create quality clothing from all-natural fibers.

From sweaters and sweatshirts to classic tees and lounge shorts, Housework offers a variety of undyed and naturally dyed garments.

Brown naturally dyed vest from regenerative fashion brand Housework

7. Patagonia

Categories: Basics, Activewear, Shorts & Pants

As a founding member of the Regenerative Organic Certification, Patagonia has been one of the few larger clothing brands to commit to sourcing regenerative organic fibers.

As with all of Patagonia’s products, the Regenerative Organic Certified® cotton clothing is made to last and easy to mend with their Product Repair program.

Orange regenerative organic certified sweater from Patagonia

Additional Honorable Mentions

These brands are making big commitments to regenerative fashion, though their variety of regenerative styles are relatively limited at this time.

  • Outerknown has a selection of basics, like tees and tanks, made with Regenerative Organic Certified® cotton.
  • prAna also has some basics made with Regenerative Organic Certified® cotton.
  • Terra Thread has helped get 700 farms ROC certified and their clothing line is made entirely with Regenerative Organic Certified® cotton.

The post 7 Regenerative Fashion Brands Building a Better Clothing System appeared first on Conscious Life & Style.

7 Regenerative Fashion Brands Building a Better Clothing System

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High Levels of Mercury Found in Alligators in Okefenokee Swamp, Georgia

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In a new study, scientists have detected high levels of mercury contamination in alligators from the Okefenokee Swamp in southeastern Georgia. The contamination in the alligators could be an indicator of more widespread heavy metal contamination in the region, which could be harmful to other wildlife, and ultimately humans.

“Alligators are very ancient creatures, and we can look at them in these areas as an indicator of what else might be happening in the ecosystem,” Kristen Zemaitis, lead author of the study and a graduate of the Odum School of Ecology at University of Georgia, said in a statement. “Studying them can relate to many different things in the food web.”

Scientists analyzed blood samples and dietary habits of 133 alligators from three different sites: Okefenokee Swamp, Georgia; Jekyll Island, Georgia; and Yawkey Wildlife Center, South Carolina. While the team found mercury in alligators from all three sites, the amount of mercury in alligators from the Okefenokee Swamp was up to eight times higher compared to the alligators along the coast. They published their findings in Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry.

Older alligators also had higher levels of mercury, which the researchers explained could be both because of the longer time the mercury could spend accumulating as well as an increase in the volume of prey — which are likely also contaminated with mercury — that the alligators eat as they grow.

But even young alligators were found to contain mercury, as “Mothers are passing toxins and heavy metals into the egg yolks during reproduction,” Zemaitis said.

A new study found that smaller alligators and hatchlings could inherit high levels of mercury from their mothers. Chamberlain Smith / University of Georgia

Because Okefenokee Swamp shares water with the Suwannee and St. Marys rivers, the researchers warned that mercury levels found in alligators, at the top of the food chain, likely means local fish also contain mercury.

“Mercury is a neurotoxin that is very lethal to organisms,” Jeb Byers, co-author of the study and a professor at the Odum School, said in a statement. “If it builds up, it moves through the food web and creates the perfect storm. That’s what we have in the Okefenokee.”

That could also pose a threat for people who hunt or fish in this area, especially if they are consuming their catches.

“Mercury contamination can be a high concern for the people who can be consuming a lot of fish or game species from the rivers, swamps or oceans that have high mercury,” Zemaitis explained. “In any given ecosystem, there are some organisms that can tolerate only very little amounts of mercury, which can result in neurological issues, reproductive issues and eventually death.”

Following this study, Zemaitis hopes to do a deeper investigation into the source of this mercury pollution, how it spreads throughout ecosystems and how it is affecting other wildlife.

“Now that we know this about one of the apex predators in these systems, we wonder what else is being affected?” she said.

The post High Levels of Mercury Found in Alligators in Okefenokee Swamp, Georgia appeared first on EcoWatch.

https://www.ecowatch.com/alligators-mercury-okefenokee-swamp.html

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Trump Plans to ‘Wean off of FEMA’ After Hurricane Season, Saying States Can ‘Handle It’

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President Donald Trump on Tuesday announced he is planning to eliminate the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) “as it exists today” after the 2025 hurricane season.

Trump said he wants to make disaster response and recovery the responsibility of states rather than the federal government.

We want to wean off of FEMA, and we want to bring it down to the state level,” Trump said, as CNN reported. “A governor should be able to handle it, and frankly, if they can’t handle it, the aftermath, then maybe they shouldn’t be governor.”

Trump added that less federal aid would be provided for disaster recovery, with the funding to be distributed directly by the Oval Office.

“We’re going to give out less money… It’s going to be from the president’s office,” Trump said, as reported by The Hill. “As an example, I just gave out $71 million to a certain state. They were looking to do about $120 [million] — they were very happy with the $71 million.”

For months, Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem have repeatedly criticized FEMA, calling the agency unnecessary and ineffective and vowing to phase it out.

WATCH: “We want to see FEMA eliminated.”

Trump & Noem say they want to end FEMA and give storm-torn states LESS money — while Trump takes personal credit for it. (Likely helping Red states more readily)

As they take credit for the job FEMA is currently doing. 🤔

[image or embed]

— The Tennessee Holler (@thetnholler.bsky.social) June 10, 2025 at 1:34 PM

“You’ve been very clear that you want to see FEMA eliminated as it exists today, so I’m preparing all of these governors [so] that they will have more control over the decisions on how they respond to their communities so that it can happen faster,” Noem told Trump on Tuesday, as The Hill reported.

Noem and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth are co-chairs of a newly established FEMA Review Council, which is expected to give recommendations on how to dramatically reduce the role of the agency and reform its mission and operations, reported CNN.

Noem said the administration was “building communication and mutual aid agreements among states to respond to each other so that they can stand on their own two feet with the federal government coming in in catastrophic circumstances with funding,” as The Hill reported.

Plans to shutter FEMA have confused state and federal emergency managers, who do not believe localized efforts would be able to replace the agency’s strong infrastructure. They said the budgets and personnel of most states would not be enough to tackle the most catastrophic disasters alone, even with a federal financial safety net.

FEMA Region 9 Administrator Robert Fenton, Jr. speaks at a press conference addressing wildfires and wind dangers in Los Angeles, California on Jan. 14, 2025. Katie McTiernan / Anadolu via Getty Images

“This is a complete misunderstanding of the role of the federal government in emergency management and disaster response and recovery, and it’s an abdication of that role when a state is overwhelmed,” a FEMA leader told CNN. “It is clear from the president’s remarks that their plan is to limp through hurricane season and then dismantle the agency.”

NOAA predicts this year’s hurricane season will be “above-normal” with as many as 19 named storms.

Following months of upheaval and layoffs, the 2025 hurricane started on June 1 with FEMA short-staffed and underprepared.

The agency has lost 10 percent or more of its staff since January, including much of its senior leadership. It is projected that FEMA will lose nearly 30 percent of its workforce before the end of this year, shrinking it from roughly 26,000 to about 18,000.

Noem recently reopened some FEMA training centers and continued contract extensions for employees who are deployed during disasters in a last-minute effort to shore up hurricane preparedness.

The Trump administration has discussed ending the practice of FEMA staff going door-to-door to assist people in applying for disaster aid, reported The Washington Post. It has also talked about the possibility of raising the damage threshold for communities to qualify for federal assistance.

“It has not worked out well,” Trump said on Tuesday of FEMA’s historic disaster response. “It’s extremely expensive. When you have a tornado or a hurricane or you have a problem of any kind in a state, that’s what you have governors for. They’re supposed to fix those problems.”

The post Trump Plans to ‘Wean off of FEMA’ After Hurricane Season, Saying States Can ‘Handle It’ appeared first on EcoWatch.

https://www.ecowatch.com/trump-fema-2025-hurricane-season.html

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U.S. Produced Record Amount of Energy in 2024, EIA Reports

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According to a recent analysis from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), the U.S. produced a record amount of energy last year, totaling 103 quadrillion British thermal units (BTUs).

The amount of energy produced in 2024 surpassed the previous record set in 2023 by 1%. However, while U.S. energy production is up, including for solar and wind sources, several other types of renewable energy sources stalled or even declined in 2024.

According to the analysis, natural gas accounted for most of the energy production in the U.S. in 2024, making up 38% of the energy mix. Natural gas has been the country’s largest source of produced energy since 2011, EIA reported.

The Cheniere Energy liquefied natural gas plant in Port Arthur, Texas on Feb. 10, 2025. Brandon Bell / Getty Images

This was followed by crude oil, which made up 27% of the domestically produced energy mix in the U.S. last year.

Coal reached its lowest output for a year since 1964, totaling 512 million short tons and making up 10% of total energy production in the U.S.

On the renewables front, solar, wind and biofuel energies each separately set records in 2024. Solar capacity increased 25%, while wind capacity increased 8%. Biofuels reached 1.4 million barrels per day of production, an increase of 6% compared to the previous records set for biofuels in 2023.

Other renewable energy sources did not beat records, though. As EIA reported, “Output from other energy sources that are primarily used for electric power generation either peaked decades ago (hydropower and nuclear) or fell slightly from their 2023 values (geothermal).”

Earlier in 2025, EIA predicted that solar and wind capacity would continue to grow this year, with utility-scale solar capacity expected to add 32.5 gigawatts, utility-scale wind capacity to add 7.7 gigawatts and battery storage to add 18.2 gigawatts.

However, the U.S. could face challenges to expanding renewables and reducing reliance on fossil fuels as the current administration has planned to suspend permits and leases for wind energy projects and has proposed opening up National Petroleum Reserve lands in Alaska for fossil fuel extraction.

Meanwhile, renewable energy is in high demand globally. Earlier this year, China invested more money into renewable energy sources over coal from overseas for the first time, and the country has set a record for new solar and wind installations in 2023 and again in 2024. In the EU, electricity generation from solar power surpassed electricity from coal power in 2024 for the first time.

Experts have predicted that renewables will continue to grow in the U.S. and abroad, but poor policies could cause the U.S. to fall behind in the global clean energy transition, leading to $50 billion of lost exports.

The post U.S. Produced Record Amount of Energy in 2024, EIA Reports appeared first on EcoWatch.

https://www.ecowatch.com/us-energy-production-record-2024.html

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