When she ran a company that sold American clothing labels in China, textile heiress Veronica Chou was a globe-trotting executive who made headlines for her socialite lifestyle and lavish 2012 wedding in Hong Kong. Now, she’s trying to clean up the fashion industry. A member of the US$2.7 billion family empire built by her father Silas Chou, the 36-year-old said she’s now devoting her time and money to start-ups that make one of the world’s most wasteful industries more sustainable. After selling the family stake in a Chinese joint venture with New York-listed Iconix Brand for US$56 million in 2015, she started her own eco-friendly label, backing suppliers that are using innovative technologies to make materials and clothes. “I’ve definitely changed my lifestyle and behaviour,” says Chou, mother of a five-year-old twin boys. “We have to look at how to cut back consumption and make things that don’t harm the planet. But we have to consume – we need to clothe ourselves.” It’s a bold bet. Sustainable fashion is a sliver of the US$1.8 trillion global apparel industry, which has ballooned over the past decade amid a boom in low-cost, quick-to-market clothing championed by the likes of retailer Zara and her father. But Chou is joining a growing list of start-ups seeking to key into shoppers who are concerned about their impact on the environment, an ethical fashion market that online platform Research And Markets expects will grow to US$8.25 billion by 2023. The fashion business produces 20 per cent of the world’s waste water and 10 per cent of carbon emissions – more than all international flights and maritime shipping combined, according to a United Nations report. It takes around 2,000 gallons of water to make a typical pair of jeans, while the equivalent of one garbage truck of textiles is sent to landfills or burned every second. Hong Kong model Mia Kang’s journey from self-loathing to self-love “The industry is missing its own sustainability targets by a mile unless it changes course,” says Karl-Hendrik Magnus, a senior partner at management consultants McKinsey. “This creates a huge advantage for smaller brands and players focused on sustainability.” Some 66 per cent of US consumers surveyed in a 2019 McKinsey study said they consider sustainability when making a luxury purchase. Still, only 31 per cent of Gen-Z and 12 per cent of baby boomers are willing to pay more for sustainable products, according to the firm. Big brands have begun to respond, with Inditex’s Zara this year pledging to use 100 per cent sustainable, organic or recycled fabrics by 2025. H&M earlier committed to do so by 2030. But deciding which technologies and materials will succeed is difficult. “It’s still fairly unclear which of the many great innovations that are in the market will scale and become dominant,” Magnus says. Chou’s Everybody & Everyone brand offers clothes such as blazers made from fermented agricultural waste, and lounge trousers woven from a wood-pulp-based fibre that uses 50 per cent less water and produces half of the emissions of a synthetic equivalent. She’s also pushing her family to invest in start-ups that offer solutions to climate problems. “There are so few people out there legitimately putting their money where their mouth is when it comes to sustainability – Veronica’s one of them,” says Niall Dunne, CEO of UK-based biodegradable plastics maker Polymateria, which Chou’s family invested in. “There’s a lot of greenwashing. She’s got a green mandate and knows how to do it.” Chou’s grandfather founded one of Hong Kong’s largest knitwear companies, South Ocean Knitters. Her father would later transform the family business with early investments in Tommy Hilfiger and Michael Kors. After earning degrees in communications and business from the University of Southern California, Chou used Iconix to bring American brands including Badgley Mischka and Madonna’s Material Girl to China. She became a regular in celebrity gossip media, appearing in photographs with Princess Beatrice of the British royal family and supermodel Naomi Campbell . Her wedding in Hong Kong to a Russian businessman included a custom-made replica of a Russian palace overlooking the city’s famous harbour. Born in Hawaii and based mostly in London, Chou is riding out the pandemic in Hong Kong and insists she’s not the fashionista the magazines make her out to be. She says she offsets all the carbon emissions from her travels and buys vintage apparel to promote reuse. We want to make sure these technologies scale and are being used as much as possible if we want to make an impact in the world. It can’t be just accessible by the elites Veronica Chou on the fashion tech companies she funds She’s also pushing for more sustainable investments in her family’s portfolio. This includes early- and seed-stage start-ups in telecommunications, media and technology through Novel TMT Ventures, an investment firm run by Chou’s half-brothers Bruno and Luis Chou that has more than US$70 million under management, according to business information platform CrunchBase. Chou says that amount is considerably more now, but declined to disclose it. Chou joins her father, brothers and sister on weekly video conference calls to discuss “all the deal flows” that they’ve come across. In a typical week now they might look at 30 companies, which reflects an increase since the pandemic, she says. “I’ll be the one asking what these potential investments are doing about the packaging … about renewable energy,” she says. Her sustainability focus helped steer family investments into start-ups such as Rent the Runway, which hires out designer clothes and is valued at US$1 billion after investments from Franklin Templeton Investments and Bain Capital Ventures. The family also invested in The RealReal, a consignment platform for second-hand luxury goods which is now listed with a market value of US$1.2 billion. Novel TMT also invested in Modern Meadow, which is using biotech tools to grow leather in a lab. Chou, herself, is an adviser to New-York based start-up Perfitly, which lets shoppers try on clothes with a customised 3D avatar that cuts down returns significantly. She says family investments can be as small as US$50,000 or more than US$5 million for equity, with the goal of making a several-fold profit via a public share offering or sale. “It’s profit with a purpose, it’s not charity,” says Chou, who was also a director of Karl Lagerfeld Greater China and continues to be an investor in the brand’s global business. Chou says she sometimes funds companies that the family rejects, investing in earlier seed and A rounds. She seeks out material sciences or innovations that are “regenerative” for the planet that have passed the research and development phase and are headed for commercialisation. Her investment time frame is five to 10 years before exit. “I get more excited about the earlier ones. They’re more groundbreaking,” she says. “We want to make sure these technologies scale and are being used as much as possible if we want to make an impact in the world. It can’t be just accessible by the elites.” Chou’s Everybody & Everyone line debuted in late 2019 but was pulled after the pandemic began and relaunched in September with a “Work From Home” range that features comfortable trousers and tops made from biodegradable eucalyptus fibre. Some sweatshirts are made with a recycled silver coating that is supposed to have antimicrobial and anti-odour properties. The brand also offers US$32 T-shirts made from reclaimed cotton and ocean plastic. To help people reduce the size of their wardrobes, Chou offers clothes adaptable to different seasons, such as a US$288 calf-length puffer jacket made from 330 plastic water bottles that can be zipped off and worn short in warmer weather. All items come in sizes 00 to 24, a range rarely offered by large brands, inspired by Chou’s “disordered eating” habits as a young woman when she and her girlfriends strove to look like supermodels. And while her father ran factories, Chou has none. “The younger generation of consumers cares about the planet and cares about justice, whether it’s women’s rights, racial equality or climate justice,” she says. “There are conscious consumers who are willing to pay a little more for products that support their values.” While the number of small, eco-conscious brands is growing, most don’t have Chou’s resources. “It’s a competitive advantage,” says Janine Stichter, vice-president and specialty retail analyst at investment firm Jefferies Group. “The only companies that we see develop technological innovation in the industry are the big companies, like Nike. There aren’t many start-up brands than can do it.”