SHEIN Aims To Continue Sustainability Efforts

 

April 18, 2025

SINGAPORE – Prosper exhibitor SHEIN has expanded its use of deadstock material, the unused surplus fabric from other brands and manufacturers. More than 28,000 meters of these fabrics were used in various SHEIN collections and styles in 2024. This is an increase of more than 40% compared to the amount recorded the previous year.

According to a 2025 SHEIN report, the company has saved the equivalent of more than 200,000 cubic metres of water, over 4,000 kilograms of chemicals, and over 42 metric tons of CO2e that would otherwise have been generated in 2024 if equivalent materials had been newly produced instead of being reclaimed. These metrics are based on the impact measurement algorithms developed by Aloqia (formerly Queen of Raw), a circular economy SaaS platform that specializes in unlocking the value of excess inventory, with the support of data scientists at MIT Solve.

Mustan Lalani, SHEIN’s Global Head of Sustainability said, “Increasing our use of deadstock is one part of our preferred materials strategy, which includes reducing our reliance on newly produced materials. By integrating more existing fabrics into our supply chain, we are adopting practical and scalable solutions that aim to minimize waste. This approach enables us to deliver quality and innovation to our customers, while continuing to build a more circular and resource-efficient fashion ecosystem.”

This initiative aligns with SHEIN’s evoluSHEIN roadmap which includes commitments to integrate more responsible materials and minimize its environmental impact, and design systems for textile circularity. Since 2022, SHEIN has leveraged Aloqia’s advanced technology and network to procure over 47,900 metres of deadstock fabrics.

This equates to estimated savings of over 357,600 cubic meters of water, over 7,400 kilograms of chemicals and over 70 metric tons of CO2e generated if equivalent materials had been newly produced instead of being reclaimed, as reported by the Aloqia platform at the end of 2024.