The London event launches on Friday, the second
leg of a month-long catwalk season which takes in New York,
Milan and Paris. Muse, 31, has made a video for Extinction
Rebellion and both want to use the shows to raise awareness.
For big labels, sustainability is an increasingly prominent
theme as they seek to promote their environmental credentials to
more carbon-conscious consumers, but Muse said more action was
needed and faster.
The American-born model, who has worked for Chanel, Estée
Lauder, Prada, Louis Vuitton and Yves Saint Laurent, said she
felt the climate crisis on a daily basis.
"We are in a shocking situation and we need to feel the shock,"
she told Reuters.
She wants fashion to lower its environmental impact and shout
about climate change to help change people's behaviour.
"That's what I love about being in fashion - this industry can
completely change people's minds overnight. We have that power
to do that," she said, adding that sustainable clothes did not
have to be "scratchy" and "brown".
"We need to harness that power and change the perception of what
sustainable fashion is," she said.
Climate activism has become a feature of the British capital's
fashion week over the last 12 months, with Extinction Rebellion
activists trying to use protests such as gluing themselves to
doors to try to draw attention to the clothing industry's impact
on the environment.
The fashion industry accounts for 8-10% of global carbon
emissions, more than all international flights and maritime
shipping combined, according to the UN Environment Programme.
For example, the UN says, textile dyeing is the second largest
polluter of water globally and it takes around 2,000 gallons of
water to make a typical pair of jeans.
Every second, the equivalent of one garbage truck of textiles is
landfilled or burned, it adds.
Muse said she loved fashion events but they needed to redirect
their energy towards sustainability.
"I personally don't want fashion week to go away. I think it's
an amazing moment that we can take to educate and inspire," she
said.
(Reporting by Sarah Young; editing by Stephen Addison)
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