Engineered for frolicking. Ref x Kacey Musgraves.
What is RefScale
What is RefScale?
RefScale tracks the carbon and water footprint of our stuff.
We calculate how the impact of producing Ref products compares with most clothes bought in the United States. We share RefScale results for each product we make on our website and publish the totals in our Sustainability Report.
RefScale takes into consideration impacts from most processes in the product’s life cycle. We publish our methodology so you can really dig in and understand what we include in the calculations.
Q1 & Q2 2024 footprint
Carbon dioxide (Metric tons)
Ref footprint: 18,761
Conventional footprint: 36,215
Savings: 17,454
Water (M gallons)
Ref footprint: 3,767
Conventional footprint: 9,120
Savings: 5,354
RefScale Verification
We work with a third party consultant annually to review and verify our methodology for our internal life cycle assessment tool, Refscale. See the certification and learn more about the summary findings & verification here.
Product life cycle
INPUTS
Water
Energy
Raw Materials
Fabric manufacturing
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Fabric dyeing
↓
Material transit
↓
Product manufacturing
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Commercial garment wash
↓
Packaging
↓
Shipment
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Customer garment care
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Garment end-of-life
OUTPUTS
CO2 emissions
Water
Why is RefScale important?
At Reformation we think about all the costs in creating fashion—not just the price tag.
We share this information on every product page of our website and tell you what impact each garment has on the environment, and how it reduces these impacts compared to most clothes bought in the US. This way we all get to see the total cost of fashion so you can make empowered choices. And we can keep creating better solutions when it comes to making clothes, like how we source.
What impacts do we measure?
CO2
Production emits carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, which pollute our atmosphere and contribute to climate change. Cotton, leather, and other raw materials grown in industrial farms create huge energy footprints. Polyester, nylon, and other petroleum-based fabrics emit harmful volatile organic compounds and nitrous oxide - a greenhouse gas almost 300x more potent than CO2.
Water
Manufacturing textiles is very water intensive. Processes like cultivating crops, extracting and cleaning the fibers, spinning it into yarn and weaving yarn into textiles require water. When reporting water footprints in the production of our garments, we look at the potential of water deprivation by considering both water consumption and scarcity/region.
Offsets
It’s not enough just to manufacture sustainably, so we also invest in programs that replace some of the resources we’ve spent, which is where offsets come in. Basically, in exchange for the resources used to make our clothes we partner with different organizations to help put some of them back. You can also offset your personal life by purchasing climate credits. Our offset partner will direct your purchase to support projects that actively reduce CO2 emissions.