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The Business of Fashion Podcast

Ten Years After Rana Plaza, Has Fashion Changed?

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 28 April 2023

⏱️ 21 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Labour rights activist Kalpona Akter and chief sustainability correspondent Sarah Kent reflect on where the industry stands a decade after the deadly factory collapse. 


Background:


Ten years ago this week an eight-storey factory complex in an industrial suburb of Dhaka, Bangladesh collapsed, killing more than 1,100 people and injuring thousands of others.


The Rana Plaza disaster ranks as one of the worst industrial disasters on record. It shook the fashion industry, shining a spotlight on critical safety failings in major brands’ supply chains. In its wake, hundreds of brands signed a groundbreaking safety agreement that helped improve conditions in thousands of factories in Bangladesh, but elsewhere little has changed.


This week on the BoF Podcast, labour rights activist and founder of the Bangladesh Centre for Workers Solidarity Kalpona Akter reflects on where the industry stands a decade later, while BoF’s Imran Amed and chief sustainability correspondent Sarah Kent discuss what still needs to change.  


“If you ask me then, ‘what did you achieve in the last ten years?’ I can say then only the improvement of safety,” says Akter. “The other areas of workers’ rights, like wages, it is still poor.”


Key Insights:


  • Fashion remains a dangerous business, with hundreds of people killed and injured in its manufacturing supply chain every year. “You see fires, electrical safety issues, issues around the handling of toxic chemicals, issues with unsafe boilers, really serious incidents that lead to injury and death on a regular basis,” says Kent. 
  • Efforts to address dangerous working conditions have been undercut by relentless demand for faster, cheaper fashion. “[It] leads to this race to the bottom, where manufacturers get squeezed and then start to cut corners in different places, from safety to wages to worker well-being. That is a huge systemic macro problem,” says Kent.
  • Consumers have the power to make a big difference by letting companies know they care about how the people who make their clothes are treated. “When they're in the store, if they can go beyond size, colour, style and price and start asking questions from the store managers… I think that would start ringing the bell in bosses’ offices,” says Akter.



Additional Resources:


Credits: 


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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, this is Imran Ahmed, founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion.

0:09.0

Welcome to the B.OF podcast. It's Friday, April 28th.

0:13.0

This week marks the 10th anniversary of the collapse of Rana Plaza,

0:18.0

one of the world's deadliest industrial disasters right in the heart of the

0:22.9

global fashion industry. There has been another horrific incident at a garment factory in Bangladesh.

0:29.9

An eight-story building collapsed today, killing at least 145 people and injuring hundreds of

0:36.2

others. This just months after a fire killed more than

0:39.6

100 people and put the unsafe working conditions at many factories in the global spotlight.

0:45.7

It was the worst industrial disaster in Bangladesh's history. And Rana Plaza today is little more than

0:53.1

rubble. Rebuilding lives is taking time too.

0:57.0

The site resembled a war zone and was too much for the emergency services. The army was quickly called in.

1:04.0

I could see people hundreds and thousands. No fire brigade and nothing.

1:12.6

It is people.

1:14.6

Those who were in the street,

1:16.6

they all came running in thousands

1:18.6

to rescue those who were trying to escape.

1:21.6

The building collapsed like a pancake.

1:24.6

Rana Plaza was a siren call for fashion companies and consumers around the world.

1:31.6

How could we continue to cast a blind eye to the working conditions of the people who make our clothes?

1:37.8

Earlier this week, our chief sustainability correspondent Sarah Kent, caught up with Calpona

1:43.0

Akter, a key voice in workers' rights activism

1:45.8

in Bangladesh, who has also been an excellent and honest guide for the BOF community over the

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