Bangladesh: Partnership for Clean Textile (PaCT) Contact: S. Akhtar Mahmood, Email: smahmood@ifc.org What was the development challenge? While Bangladesh’s textile industry is an important driver of the national economy, it is also a heavy consumer of water, and a major polluter of water bodies around it. Suboptimal use of chemicals and inadequate effluent treatment is contaminating surface waters, negatively affecting the lives of nearly 12 million people. Competitiveness and further growth in Bangladesh’s apparel industry will critically depend on achieving efficiencies in water use and reducing discharge. In the PaCT project, firm-level advice from IFC is complemented by multi-stakeholder engagement leading to policy and regulatory interventions, and collective action by industry. The target is to induce change in 200 factories and lay the ground for changes in the rest of the industry after the project closes. What strategies did this project use to deliver solutions? A multipronged approach is needed to induce adoption of good practices. In this project, the IFC used its convening power to bring together many actors around a shared agenda. PaCT embodies a multi-stakeholder approach by working to link buyers, factories, financial institutions, sector associations, and local communities and governments for coordinated action on water sustainability. Through PaCT, global apparel buyers develop and apply harmonized procurement guidelines that integrate water sustainability criteria. The leading industry association, Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA), is partnering with PaCT to establish a Textile Technology Business Center, to support adoption of CP measures by sharing technology case studies and associated technical and financial information. A Textile Sustainability Platform is being formed to reach out to national and sector- http://sod level stakeholders to address water sustainability challenges in the sector. And in partnership with leading factories, PaCT will work with business, government, and communities in selected textile manufacturing clusters, to develop and put in practice a vision for Clean Clusters. What lessons does this project offer for others? This project shows that in transforming a sector, relationships – among governments, communities, and business – must also be transformed. World Bank Group leadership brings together multiple stakeholders to change incentives and behavior of diverse actors to move forward a change agenda. PaCT faces major challenges in implementation, but in addressing these challenges is working on a number of different tools to address these, including survey instruments, awareness building materials, assessment methodologies and guidance notes for clients. These, and other knowledge products such as case studies, can also be shared with others. Source: PaCT Project Team, World Bank Group. http://sod