As temperatures surged through the workday, workers in Bangladesh and Pakistan consistently described experiencing dizziness, nausea, blurred vision, muscle cramps, fainting spells and chronic dehydration.
“Sometimes my vision becomes blurry. I have felt dizzy many times,” Muhammad Hunain, a textile mill worker in Karachi, told the watchdog and advocacy organisation Climate Rights International. “There have been moments when I felt like I might faint, but stopping work is not an option. If I sit down or slow down too much, the supervisors scold us, and the contractor can cut our wages.”
In two reports documenting the impact of heat stress on garment factory workers in Dhaka and Karachi, CRI revealed that rising temperatures exacerbated by poor working conditions have severely affected worker health across facilities used by major international brands including H&M, Gap, Levi’s and Inditex, among others. The investigations, which took place over 2023 and 2024 in Bangladesh and this year in Pakistan, found factories whose indoor temperatures regularly exceed outdoor heat, trapped by machinery, unventilated spaces and dense production floors.
The findings prompted CRI to send a joint letter with 44 labour rights, climate and sustainable-fashion organisations asking the steering committee of the International Accord — a binding workplace safety agreement between 282 global brands and suppliers founded after the Rana Plaza tragedy — to update its mandate to include climate-related hazards, notably extreme heat.
On Dec. 8, CRI got its reply: The Accord “has formally agreed to treat heat stress as a workplace-safety risk and will create a binding protocol to address it,” it said in a letter back to CRI.
The move marks the first major change to the Accord’s mandate, which in the past focused on structural, electrical, boiler and fire safety, to address a hazard.
While net zero pledges and decarbonisation targets have been the centre of fashion’s climate commitments, heat stress faced by workers across apparel factories has become a serious yet largely unaddressed concern. In the most critical insight from CRI’s reports, labour-rights abuses were linked to actively preventing workers from adapting to climate change and in turn coping with extreme heat.
“It’s not just that it’s really hot,” said Cara Schulte, the lead researcher on CRI’s two heat stress reports. “The rules in the factory stop people from staying hydrated, slowing down, resting, adjusting their working hours. Something as simple as letting workers take breaks to drink water could make a huge difference.”
Even engineering fixes like heat pumps, which can reduce indoor temperatures, won’t help if workers cannot take breaks, access shade or avoid punitive wage deductions for slowing down, she added.
Schulte said the aim of the reports was to put heat stress as a key issue, on brands’ radars — show that more investment is needed to combat it and that there is a business case for doing so, because if workers are suffering production is bound to slow down.
Given this, the recognition from the Accord, which is a binding agreement among brands and suppliers, is a victory.
“What we feel really excited about is now heat has been identified as a specific risk to workers,” Schulte said.
Workers explained to CRI that, even as it gets hotter, factory and mill authorities as well as the brands sourcing from them do little to protect them from the heat. Even in extreme conditions, production targets remain unchanged. Many workers reported no fans, no cooling units and little to no ventilation in their workplaces, with some noting that their factories keep doors or windows closed during work hours.
“We saw over 150 complaints to brands from workers related to heat through the Accord’s reporting mechanism,” Schulte said. “For a worker to file a complaint, considering the extent of rights abuse they face, they really have to feel something is wrong and worth the risk of retaliation that they fear. That alone shows the severity.”
All the brands, other than Ikea, that were linked to factories facing severe heat stress in CRI’s investigation are signatories of the Accord. But despite the scale of the problem, brand responses to CRI’s findings were uneven.
Only Next claimed to already have heat-protection guidelines in place for its supplier factories.
H&M said it recognises heat as a risk and plans to introduce protections next year, and Mango agreed to support the inclusion of heat as a “defined risk” within its revised Pakistan safety programme.
Several other brands, including Bestseller and Levi’s, confirmed that they source from factories included in the Pakistan investigation but did not provide detailed heat-protection plans. Most responses leaned on broad language about “safe and healthy working environments,” human-rights commitments or supplier codes of conduct — none of which include concrete, enforceable heat-mitigation standards.
Gap Inc., which joined the Pakistan Accord in 2023, did not respond to CRI’s request for comment, nor did it reply to a request from The Business of Fashion.
“It’s clear that those standards are not being enforced on the ground,” Schulte said. “Making sure workers have access to safe water or bathrooms are basic needs, but workers consistently told us they don’t have access to the most basic protections.”
The Accord’s heat stress protocol will integrate heat assessments into its inspections, and consult unions, brands and technical experts on engineering solutions and best-practice standards.
The shift effectively brings climate adaptation, beyond decarbonisation, into the centre of global supply-chain safety governance.
