Sustainability in fashion is no longer a marketing story — it is becoming a legal requirement. The EU’s incoming Digital Product Passport (targeted for 2027), mandatory ESG disclosure regulations, and increasingly sophisticated consumer awareness are all pushing brands to demonstrate, not just claim, environmental responsibility. For handbag brands and buyers sourcing from China, this creates an urgent question: how do you find a manufacturer that can actually support your sustainability claims with verified documentation? This guide explains the key certifications, eco-material options, and what to look for when evaluating a factory’s genuine green credentials.

Why Sustainability Is Now a Commercial Imperative
Consumer search interest for “sustainable fashion” is projected to peak in early 2026, representing a 14x increase compared to 2021 levels. More tellingly, this interest is now translating into purchasing criteria rather than just browsing behaviour. European and Australian retailers — key markets for OEM-sourced handbags — are beginning to require supply chain sustainability documentation as a condition of listing. Brands without verifiable factory-level certifications are finding themselves excluded from retail partnerships and tender processes.
The business case is straightforward: brands that invest in sustainability certification now build a durable competitive moat. Brands that delay face increasing regulatory risk and retail exclusion.
Understanding the Key Sustainability Certifications
GRS — Global Recycled Standard
The Global Recycled Standard (GRS) is the most widely recognised certification for recycled content in textile and leather goods manufacturing. To qualify, a product must contain a minimum of 20% recycled input materials (most certified products significantly exceed this threshold).
GRS certification covers the full supply chain — not just the final product — meaning that the recycled fibre, the yarn spinner, the fabric mill, and the bag factory all need to be chain-of-custody certified. When a factory claims GRS certification, ask specifically:
- Is the factory itself GRS certified (transaction certificate), or only the material supplier?
- Can they provide current GRS transaction certificates for specific materials?
- What percentage of recycled content is included in the specific product you are ordering?
GRS is particularly important for bags made from recycled polyester, recycled nylon, or rPET-based vegan leathers — all of which are in high demand from sustainability-focused buyers.
Higg Index — Measuring Actual Environmental Impact
The Higg Index (developed by the Sustainable Apparel Coalition) is a suite of tools that measure environmental and social performance across the supply chain. For manufacturing facilities, the most relevant module is the Higg Facility Environmental Module (FEM), which scores factories on:
- Energy consumption and carbon emissions
- Water usage and effluent management
- Chemical management (ZDHC compliance)
- Waste management and diversion rates
A factory with a verified Higg FEM score provides quantified, audited environmental data — far more credible than self-reported “eco-friendly” claims. Major brands including H&M, Adidas, and Patagonia require Higg FEM scores from their supply chain partners. For B2B handbag buyers seeking retail partnerships with these categories of brands, sourcing from a Higg-verified factory is increasingly non-negotiable.
OEKO-TEX STANDARD 100
OEKO-TEX 100 certifies that every component of a finished product — fabric, hardware, lining, thread, even buttons — has been tested for harmful substances and is safe for human skin contact. This certification is essential for products entering markets with strict chemical safety standards, including the EU and USA.
BSCI / SEDEX — Social Compliance
The Business Social Compliance Initiative (BSCI) and SEDEX (Supplier Ethical Data Exchange) are social audit frameworks that verify fair labour practices, safe working conditions, and ethical management at the factory level. These are often required by European retailers as a prerequisite for supply relationships.
Eco-Friendly Handbag Materials: What’s Available Now
| Material | Source | Status in 2026 | Best Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| Recycled PU leather (rPU) | Recycled plastics | Mainstream — widely available | Entry-to-mid price totes, crossbodies |
| Recycled nylon (rNylon) | Fishing nets, pre-consumer waste | Growing — cost-competitive | Lightweight bags, backpacks |
| rPET-based canvas | Recycled PET bottles | Mainstream — strong supply | Canvas totes, shopping bags |
| Cactus leather (Desserto) | Organic nopal cactus | Premium niche, scaling up | Structured luxury bags |
| Mushroom leather (Mylo) | Mycelium (fungal root) | Early commercial — high cost | Flagship/limited edition pieces |
| Apple/Piñatex leather | Fruit waste byproducts | Available — limited colours | Fashion accessories |
| Organic cotton canvas | GOTS-certified cotton | Well-established | Totes, beach bags, casual styles |
For most brands, recycled PU (rPU) and recycled nylon represent the most commercially viable entry point into sustainable materials — available at competitive prices, with established GRS-certified supply chains, and aesthetic quality that meets mid-market consumer expectations.

How to Verify a Factory’s Sustainability Claims
Greenwashing — making unsupported environmental claims — is rife in the manufacturing sector. These are the verification steps that matter:
- Request current certificates: All major certifications (GRS, OEKO-TEX, BSCI) are time-limited and must be renewed. Ask for the specific certificate document with the issuing body’s name, scope, and expiry date. Cross-reference against the certification body’s public database.
- Check Higg FEM verification status: A factory can “use” the Higg Index internally without external verification. Only externally verified scores (marked as “verified” in the Higg portal) are independently credible.
- Request material transaction certificates: For GRS-claimed materials, the factory should be able to provide a transaction certificate from the material supplier for the specific material you are purchasing.
- Ask about ZDHC compliance: The Zero Discharge of Hazardous Chemicals (ZDHC) programme sets standards for chemical management in wet processes (dyeing, finishing). A factory compliant with ZDHC Wastewater Guidelines demonstrates genuine process-level sustainability commitment.
- Visit or commission an audit: For high-volume orders, a third-party social and environmental audit (by Bureau Veritas, Intertek, or SGS) provides independent validation that cannot be fabricated.
Key Question to Ask Every Factory: “Can you provide a current GRS transaction certificate for the recycled polyester used in this order, issued to your factory — not just to your material supplier?” A genuine GRS-certified factory will be able to produce this document immediately.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the difference between GRS and OEKO-TEX certification?
A: GRS (Global Recycled Standard) certifies that a product contains a minimum percentage of recycled content and that recycled claims are tracked through the supply chain. OEKO-TEX STANDARD 100 certifies that the finished product is free from harmful substances at levels dangerous to human health. They address different sustainability dimensions and are not interchangeable — a product can and should hold both if targeting sustainable market positioning.
Q: Is vegan leather actually more sustainable than real leather?
A: It depends on the specific material. Conventional PU “vegan leather” made from virgin plastic is not necessarily more sustainable over its lifecycle than responsibly tanned genuine leather. However, recycled PU (rPU) made from post-consumer plastic waste, or bio-based leathers from cactus or mushroom, carry significantly lower environmental footprints. Always ask for the specific material specification and its certification when evaluating sustainability claims.
Q: Does using a GRS-certified factory mean my bags are “sustainable”?
A: GRS certification is a necessary but not sufficient condition for a “sustainable” product claim. It confirms recycled content tracking — but your brand’s sustainability story also depends on the factory’s energy use, labour practices, transportation carbon footprint, and product longevity design. A holistic sustainability claim requires multiple layers of verification.
Source From a GRS and Higg Index Certified Factory
Our Guangzhou facility holds both GRS and Higg Index certification. We can produce handbags in recycled PU, rNylon, rPET canvas, and organic cotton — with full documentation to support your brand’s sustainability claims in any market. Contact us for a certified materials specification sheet.








