Over the past few years, we have seen businesses across multiple industries shift toward more sustainable operations with digital solutions playing a central role in that transition. Here’s a look at how a few resource-intensive sectors are making meaningful progress.
Transforming fashion digitally
With the emergence of fast fashion and the rise of overproduction, the fashion industry has long been under scrutiny for its environmental footprint. Its biggest challenges include complex global supply chains, rapid changes in consumer demand, reliance on harmful fabrics and dyes, and significant waste from manufacturers and consumers alike.
Digital solutions that are helping the industry move toward more sustainable operations include:
- Cloud systems: Beyond streamlining operations, cloud platforms give fashion brands unified access to operational data across regions.
- Automation: Automated workflows and warehouse processes help reduce human error, minimize fabric and packaging waste, optimize material usage, and improve fulfilment efficiency.
- AI and AI agents: From forecasting trends to optimizing inventory levels, AI allows brands to make more responsible production decisions. Many fashion businesses now use AI agents, like the solutions Fortude helps implement, to track emerging trends, understand true inventory requirements, and trigger the right actions based on real-time data.
- Digital Product Passports (DPPs): As global regulators push for greater transparency, DPPs provide consumers and partners with a complete digital record of a product’s lifecycle, from raw material sourcing and manufacturing conditions to repairability and end-of-life options. These passports help brands prove ethical sourcing, meet circularity goals, reduce greenwashing risks, and build trust with increasingly eco-conscious consumers. Fortude has partnered with Ettos to help fashion businesses improve traceability across their fashion supply chains with solutions like DPPs.
Serving sustainability to the food and beverage (F&B) industry
The F&B industry also has a complex relationship with sustainability. Its challenges include inefficient water and energy use during manufacturing, reliance on harmful ingredients, food spoilage, excessive packaging, and large-scale waste across the value chain.
Technology is helping reshape F&B sustainability in areas such as:
- IoT and smart monitoring: Sensors help track temperature, humidity, and equipment performance, reducing spoilage, improving food safety, and optimizing energy and water use during production.
- Data platforms and analytics: By analyzing patterns across procurement, manufacturing, logistics, and consumer demand, businesses can reduce overproduction, optimize recipes and batch sizes, and identify hotspots of waste.
- Automation: Automated quality checks, portioning, and packaging help reduce inconsistencies, cut down on unused raw materials, and enhance traceability.
Strengthening sustainability in distribution
For industries with complex distribution networks, like fashion, F&B, retail, and wholesale, ensuring transparency and ethicality is essential. Yet, many businesses struggle with supply chain opacity, especially when multiple tiers of suppliers and outsourced partners are involved.
Digital solutions making a difference include:
- Blockchain for traceability: Blockchain creates tamper-proof records of every transaction or material movement. This transparency exposes unethical practices, validates responsible sourcing, and strengthens trust with consumers, regulators, and investors.
- Advanced supply chain visibility platforms: These systems consolidate data from multiple vendors and logistics partners, providing real-time tracking across the entire chain. This helps businesses reduce delays, lower emissions from transportation, and make more responsible routing decisions.
- AI-driven demand and inventory planning: AI-powered forecasting helps reduce unnecessary stock movement, minimize returns, and avoid overstocking, significantly reducing waste and emissions.