Fashion Label Chanel Invests $25 Million in New Climate Adaptation Fund

Chanel is backing a new climate adaptation fund that aims to raise $100 million by 2025 to invest in projects. (Getty Images)
Chanel is backing a new climate adaptation fund that aims to raise $100 million by 2025 to invest in projects. (Getty Images)
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Fashion Label Chanel Invests $25 Million in New Climate Adaptation Fund

Chanel is backing a new climate adaptation fund that aims to raise $100 million by 2025 to invest in projects. (Getty Images)
Chanel is backing a new climate adaptation fund that aims to raise $100 million by 2025 to invest in projects. (Getty Images)

French fashion house Chanel is backing a new climate adaptation fund that aims to raise $100 million by 2025 to invest in projects to promote sustainable agriculture, protect forests and support small-scale farmers in developing countries.

The Landscape Resilience Fund (LRF) was developed by green group WWF and Swiss-based social enterprise South Pole and is starting with $25 million from luxury brand Chanel and $1.3 million from the Global Environment Facility.

An independent nonprofit, the LRF aims to attract a further five to 10 additional investors to help finance small businesses and projects that foster climate-resilient agriculture and forestry practices, and protect natural systems.

Martin Stadelmann, a senior director at South Pole, which will manage the LRF, said it was a pioneering way for a major multinational company to invest in adaptation to climate change.

"As (with) other companies, some of their supply chains are under threat because of climate change," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

One million animal and plant species are at risk of extinction due to humankind's relentless pursuit of economic growth, scientists warned in a 2019 landmark report on the devastating impact of modern civilization on the natural world.

Environmentalists largely blame production of commodities like palm oil, beef and minerals for destruction of forests, as they are cleared for plantations, ranches, farms and mines.

Cutting down forests has major implications for global goals to curb climate change, as trees absorb about a third of the planet-warming emissions produced worldwide, but release carbon back into the air when they rot or are burned.

Forests also provide food and livelihoods, and are an essential habitat for wildlife.

Better conservation, restoration and management of natural areas, such as parks, forests and wildernesses, is seen as key for nations to meet targets to reduce planet-heating emissions and reverse the loss of plant and animal species.

Global annual spending to protect and restore nature on land needs to triple this decade to about $350 billion, a UN report said in May, urging a shift in mindset among financiers, businesses and governments.

Presently, only about 5% of total climate finance goes to adapting to a warmer planet, with most of that coming from public funds, South Pole officials said.

"The fund really targets the 'missing middle' where there is currently no commercial financing," said Urs Dieterich, a fund manager at South Pole and managing director of the LRF.

The fund will provide cheap loans and technical assistance to small businesses that work with smallholders in vulnerable landscapes – such as cocoa or coffee growers and rattan harvesters – and help them access better farming inputs, such as drought-resistant seeds, as well as training and finance.

Repaid loans will be re-invested in other small businesses working on climate adaptation.

Projects can apply online for funding or approach the LRF directly, and will be assessed for their climate change exposure and adaptation plans. Their progress will be tracked by local staff and published in annual reports, fund officials said.

"There has never been a more critical time for the private sector to step up and help close the investment gap needed for effective climate adaptation," Andrea d'Avack, chief sustainability officer at Chanel, said in a statement.

The LRF offers an opportunity to "explore different approaches that could help advance changes in our own supply chain and business practices", d'Avack added.



Burberry’s Quarterly Sales Fall Less Than Expected 

A man carries a Burberry shopping bag on New Bond Street in London, Britain, July 15, 2024. (Reuters) 
A man carries a Burberry shopping bag on New Bond Street in London, Britain, July 15, 2024. (Reuters) 
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Burberry’s Quarterly Sales Fall Less Than Expected 

A man carries a Burberry shopping bag on New Bond Street in London, Britain, July 15, 2024. (Reuters) 
A man carries a Burberry shopping bag on New Bond Street in London, Britain, July 15, 2024. (Reuters) 

British luxury brand Burberry reported a smaller than expected 4% drop in quarterly comparable store sales on Friday, helped by stronger festive demand in the United States.

Analysts had expected a 12% decline in comparable sales for the company's third quarter to end-December.

Burberry said it was now more likely that it would avoid a full-year operating loss. It reported an adjusted operating loss of 41 million pounds ($51 million) in the first half.

Third-quarter sales in the Americas rose 4%, and Burberry said New York in particular performed well. Asia Pacific continued to lag, with sales down 9% and mainland China down 7%.