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2026 Oritain Supply Chain Intelligence Report
Revealing a Growing Trust Gap & Risk in Supply Chains
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14 May 2026
London, 14 May 2026 — Oritain, global leaders in forensic origin verification, today announced the release of its inaugural 2026 Global Supply Chain Intelligence Report. Drawing on multiple global datasets, the report reflects a critical inflection point for global trade: as regulatory scrutiny, economic pressure and consumer scepticism intensify, visibility alone is no longer enough to operate with confidence.
The findings point not to a single-issue risk spike, but to a wider structural gap between supply chain documentation and supply chain truth, with implications for markets, consumers, investors and regulators alike. Using cotton as a spotlight commodity to examine how one of the world’s most traded materials moves under overlapping regulatory, trade and cost pressures, the report shows that after three years of steady progress, exposure to cotton prohibited cotton has surged back to pre 2021 levels.
The report draws on a multi‑year forensic sampling programme analysing approximately 1,000 garments across 40 brands annually, alongside large-scale consumer research, industry professional and supplier intelligence spanning key global manufacturing hubs. While nearly 94% of UK companies and 87% of US companies surveyed now trace their cotton supply chains, Oritain’s Market Insights data shows that 90% of brands analysed in 2025 recorded at least result consistent with prohibited cotton, up sharply from 64% the previous year. The data suggests that while transparency initiatives have scaled, assurance has not kept pace.
Oritain’s 2026 Global Supply Chain Intelligence Report highlights a fundamental shift facing corporate leadership: while traceability demonstrates intent and process, only verification provides a defensible source of truth in an increasingly enforcement-led environment. As supply chains evolve and sourcing strategies adjust under economic and geopolitical pressure, periodic assurance models are proving insufficient.
“The data tells a clear story: risk isn’t disappearing, it is re-emerging,” said Alyn Franklin, CEO at Oritain.
“As brands pivot manufacturing regions, they’re finding that upstream material exposure hasn’t gone away – it is increasingly appearing in other key manufacturing hubs. Without independent verification, that risk travels quietly through complex trade routes and only surfaces at the end of the supply chain, when goods are stopped, costs escalate and production timelines are already missed.”
The report demonstrates that reliance on declarations alone is no longer sufficient to support market access, investor confidence or brand resilience.
The future of resilient supply chains lies in programmatic forensic verification: a continuous, independent and repeatable model that enables proactive management rather than late-stage remediation. By operating as a connected network, spanning brands, suppliers and regulators, this approach allows businesses to detect issues earlier, substantiate claims credibly and navigate complexity with confidence.
“As regulatory and economic pressures intensify, visibility without verification no longer holds,” said Alyn.
“What matters now is evidence that stands up. Oritain’s role is to provide the science, intelligence and networked approach that allows organisations to move from reactive compliance to proactive supply chain management – building trust that is measurable, defensible and scalable over time.”