Fashion
MEPs back simpler EU deforestation rules; grant extra transition year
Lawmakers voted to delay implementation by one year to give businesses and exporting countries more time to adjust and improve digital due-diligence systems. Under the new timetable, large operators and traders must comply from December 30, 2026, while micro and small enterprises will follow from June 30, 2027, the Parliament said in a press release.
European Parliament has voted to simplify the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) and delay its enforcement by one year to ease compliance for companies.
Large operators would apply the regulation from December 30, 2026, with small firms following by June 30, 2027.
MEPs backed lighter obligations for micro and small operators and a review of administrative burdens by April 2026.
MEPs also supported a shift in responsibility, requiring due-diligence declarations only from the companies first placing products on the EU market. Micro and small primary operators would file a one-off simplified declaration, reducing compliance costs. Parliament also requested a legal review by April 30, 2026, to assess administrative burdens.
The vote passed with 402 in favour, 250 against and 8 abstentions, clearing the way for negotiations with EU member states. For the one-year postponement to apply, the final law must be endorsed by both institutions and published before the end of 2025.
The EU regulation targets deforestation linked to various products. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (UN FAO) estimates 420 million hectares of forest were destroyed between 1990 and 2020, with EU consumption driving around 10 per cent of global deforestation.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KD)
Fashion
Canada’s Lululemon revamps commercial strategy with new global leader
Ms. Burgoyne joined lululemon in 2006 and became the company’s first President in 2020. Throughout her tenure, she has assumed roles of increasing responsibility and led the North America business through periods of rapid growth and expansion.
Lululemon Athletica has announced that Celeste Burgoyne, president of the Americas and global guest innovation, will leave at the end of December 2025 after 19 years with the brand.
The company will consolidate regional leadership and has appointed André Maestrini as president and chief commercial officer, giving him global oversight of stores, regions, digital channels and commercial strategy.
“We are grateful for Celeste’s leadership and significant contributions to lululemon’s business and culture over the past 19 years. She has been instrumental in growing our footprint in the Americas, creating high-quality guest experiences, and mentoring our teams across the organization,” said Calvin McDonald, Chief Executive Officer, lululemon. “I deeply appreciate her partnership and friendship, and we wish her all the best in the future.”
“My time at lululemon has been both inspiring and rewarding beyond belief,” said Ms. Burgoyne. “I am so proud of what we have accomplished as an organization since I joined in 2006 and know the team will take the company to even greater heights in the years to come. I look forward to continuing to support the brand as a lifelong fan.”
In conjunction with this announcement, lululemon has made the decision to consolidate regional leadership across the company and appoint André Maestrini as President and Chief Commercial Officer, effective immediately. Mr. Maestrini will continue to report directly to Mr. McDonald.
In this newly created role, Mr. Maestrini will provide integrated oversight of all of lululemon’s regions, stores, and digital channels globally. He will also oversee lululemon’s global commercial strategy with a focus on continued market expansion, revenue generation, and accelerating best practice sharing, across all regions including North America.
Mr. Maestrini joined lululemon in 2021 as Executive Vice President of International. In his current role, he has overseen lululemon’s operations in EMEA, APAC, and China Mainland, and has helped to more than quadruple lululemon’s international revenues.
“André has demonstrated a proven ability to unlock opportunities, advance our global expansion, and deliver growth across multiple markets,” said Mr. McDonald. “Leveraging operational discipline, deep guest insights, and extensive brand-building experience, André is the ideal person to lead our business across all markets, including North America, as we remain focused on delivering value for our guests, employees, and shareholders.”
Before joining lululemon, Mr. Maestrini spent 14 years at adidas in various senior roles across the globe. During this time, he served in a number of General Manager positions where he helped grow the company’s global sports categories and regional markets. Prior to adidas, Mr. Maestrini held marketing roles at The Coca-Cola Company, Danone, and Kraft Jacobs Suchard.
Note: The headline, insights, and image of this press release may have been refined by the Fibre2Fashion staff; the rest of the content remains unchanged.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (RM)
Fashion
India’s growth expected to be robust despite external headwinds: IMF
Under the baseline assumption of prolonged 50-per cent US tariffs, India’s real gross domestic product (GDP) is projected to grow at 6.6 per cent in fiscal 2025-26 (FY26) before moderating to 6.2 per cent in FY27, the IMF said.
The reform of the goods and services tax (GST) and the resulting reduction in the effective rate are expected to help cushion the adverse impact of tariffs.
Despite external headwinds, India’s growth is expected to be robust, backed by favourable domestic conditions, the IMF has said.
Assuming prolonged 50-per cent US tariffs, FY26 real GDP may grow at 6.6 per cent before moderating to 6.2 per cent in FY27.
Further deepening of geo-economic fragmentation could lead to tighter financial conditions, higher input costs and lower trade, FDI and economic growth.
Headline inflation is projected to remain well contained, reflecting the one-off effect of the GST reform and continued benign food prices, it remarked in a release.
Looking ahead, India’s ambition to become an advanced economy can be supported by advancing comprehensive structural reforms that enable higher potential growth, the IMF noted.
There are significant near-term risks to the economic outlook. On the upside, the conclusion of new trade agreements and faster implementation of structural reform domestically could boost exports, private investment and employment.
On the downside, further deepening of geo-economic fragmentation could lead to tighter financial conditions, higher input costs and lower trade, foreign direct investment (FDI) and economic growth.
Unpredictable weather shocks could affect crop yields, adversely impact rural consumption and reignite inflationary pressures, the IMF added.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
India’s trade push spans close to 50 countries, Goyal says
India has concluded balanced free trade agreements (FTAs) with Australia, the UAE, Mauritius, the United Kingdom and the EFTA bloc, and is negotiating with partners representing nearly 50 nations, Indian Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal said recently.
He stressed self-reliance, India’s innovation strengths, young talent and resilient supply-chain partnerships.
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