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Can H&M Prove Sustainability is a Growth Engine?

4/8/202627 min

In March, H&M released financial results alongside its annual sustainability report, presenting two seemingly contrasting narratives. The company reported a 34.6 percent reduction in emissions from 2019 levels and also noted that 91 percent of its materials are now sustainably sourced. However, this environmental progress occurred alongside a 1 percent dip in sales, raising questions about the commercial viability of its green strategy.

While many industry peers are backing away from environmental messaging to focus on the bottom line, H&M is arguing that sustainability is not in tension with profit, but is rather a "core driver of future growth". 

On The Debrief, we examine whether this decoupling of growth from environmental impact can truly resonate with consumers, or if it remains a purely internal metric.

Key Insights:

 

  • As a fast fashion brand, H&M understands that sustainability alone is not going to win back shoppers. Instead, Walid says the company is trying to translate its recent efforts into something more tangible at the point of purchase. The pitch is not that consumers care about emissions reporting in itself, but that sustainability can function as a marker of quality. As Leyla Ertur, H&M’s Head of Sustainability, told Walid during their conversation, “Our customers don’t care about our Scope 3 emissions going down. What they care about is what they’re buying.”
  • Walid suggests that one of H&M’s biggest challenges is the disconnect between how the company sees itself and how customers perceive it. “When we say H&M, I think people are thinking of H&M, the brand … But when H&M talks about itself, they’re talking [about] the whole conglomerate,” she says, pointing to brands like COS and Weekday, which occupy a more elevated position. While those labels may successfully compete with higher-end high street players, that distinction is largely invisible to consumers, who still associate H&M with “fast fashion … something cheap for an occasion.” As a result, while the group may understand how to build more premium propositions across its portfolio, Walid argues that the core H&M brand itself has not yet meaningfully shifted perception.
  • For all the company’s investments and emissions reductions, the core contradiction remains that H&M is still producing and selling huge volumes of clothing. Waleed is explicit about that limitation: “They’re not addressing the overconsumption and overproduction problem in fashion.” At the same time, she notes that H&M is one of the few large players still investing at scale in decarbonisation, water reduction and supply chain upgrades.
  • H&M is investing across sustainability, brand elevation and new channels like resale, but Waleed cautions that it is still too early to judge whether these efforts are working. “They use all these different levers that don’t come into one … There needs to be a way to bring that together,” she says. Initiatives like fashion week shows, collaborations and younger-facing campaigns are designed to re-engage consumers, but “I don’t think people have caught traction … just yet.” For now, the strategy remains a long-term bet rather than a proven turnaround.

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First 90 seconds
  1. Brian Baskin· Host0:00

    [upbeat music] Hello, and welcome to The Debrief from the Business of Fashion, where each week we delve into our most popular BOF professional stories with the correspondents who created them. I'm executive editor Brian Baskin.

  2. Sheena Butler-Young· Host0:18

    And I'm senior correspondent Sheena Butler-Young. When H&M unveiled its latest financial results alongside its annual sustainability report in March, it was a tale of two narratives. On one hand, the company reported a thirty-four point six percent reduction in emissions from twenty nineteen levels, and it said ninety-one percent of its materials are now recycled or sustainably sourced. On the other, sales dipped one percent even as operating profits rose and gross margins improved.

  3. Brian Baskin· Host0:46

    We've seen a lot of companies in this situation back away from the sustainability messaging so they can focus on the bottom line. But H&M is arguing these two stories aren't in tension. H&M is actually positioning sustainability as a core driver of growth. Their message is that this isn't just about doing less harm to the planet, it's about building a better and more profitable business, too.

  4. Sheena Butler-Young· Host1:07

    It's a bold claim for a company operating at H&M's scale. But the real question is whether that strategy can translate beyond internal metrics and actually resonate with the customers buying its clothes.

  5. Brian Baskin· Host1:17

    Today we're joined by BOF reporter Shaiza Waleed, who sat down with H&M CEO Daniel Ervér and Chief Sustainability Officer Leila Artur to unpack H&M's big bet and whether the idea that sustainability

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