
The Spanish clothing store Mango teams up with the textile manufacturer Pyratex to introduce a ‘solidarity capsule collection’ comprised of cotton and cellulose from wood and seaweed.
The World Ocean Day celebration and the company’s dedication to its environmental goal are both reflected in the Mango seaweed and wood cellulose effort with Pyratex.
Spanish textile manufacturer Pyratex specialises in cutting-edge fabrics. They will introduce a pair of pants and a t-shirt in solidarity with Mango. Asociación Vellmar, an organisation run by marine biologist Manu San Félix, will receive 100% of the sales proceeds in order to support a ground-breaking project for rebuilding posidonia (neptune grass), an aquatic plant native to the Mediterranean Sea that is in risk of going extinct.
The phrase From the sea for the sea will be used to advertise the sale of the pair of items. The t-shirt and the trousers, which were created only in Barcelona and produced in Morocco, can be purchased in a few select stores in Spain, the United States, Croatia, and Greece as well as online through Mango’s Spanish website.
The programme is a component of Mango’s dedication to its Sustainable Vision 2030 sustainability strategy, which intends to put into action steps to lessen the company’s impact on the globe through four major policies: climate change, water usage, packaging, and a policy to safeguard biodiversity.
Mango stated in April that it was stepping up its expansion in the US, and soon after, it revealed that it was also building 13 new locations in the UK.
Mango advanced its sustainability vision in December as it worked to improve its connections with its suppliers. Andrés Fernández, global director of sustainability and sourcing for Mango, detailed how the firm is collaborating with its suppliers to increase circularity and transparency throughout the supply chain in an exclusive interview.






