Next-gen materials are shifting from niche experiment to boardroom priority, with a new report showing they could reach 8% of the global fiber market by 2030, or about 13 million tons. For fashion brands, that shift is not just about sustainability messaging—it is increasingly tied to cost, risk, regulation, and long-term competitiveness.
Why next-gen materials matter now
According to BCG, materials currently account for about 91% of the fashion industry’s total emissions and roughly 30% of the cost of goods sold. Replacing conventional fibers with lower-impact next-gen options is therefore one of the most powerful levers brands have to cut carbon and manage cost volatility.
The report estimates that strategically scaling these innovations could deliver around a 4% reduction in COGS over five years compared with doing nothing, as economies of scale and smarter sourcing start to bite. At the same time, growing regulatory pressure, climate-related supply shocks, and shifting…
consumer expectations mean sticking with the status quo is becoming riskier each season. From 1% today to 8% in 2030 Next-gen materials currently represent only about 1% of the global fiber market, but BCG projects that share could rise to 8% by 2030.
That growth would still likely undershoot overall demand for low-impact textiles, given how fast regulation and corporate climate targets are tightening. The gap between potential and need is where the risk lies.
Without deliberate action to scale supply and reduce costs, brands may soon find that regulatory timelines, investor expectations, and consumer promises outpace the availability of credible, affordable next-gen materials. The three levers: demand, cost, capital The report frames scaling as a three‑lever challenge.
On the demand side, brands need to send consistent, long-term volume signals—often via demand pooling or multi‑year offtake agreements—to give innovators and manufacturers the confidence to invest…
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