Daily Signals 28.04.2021

Signals

Patagonia spotlights the power of local energy, a Milan supermarket adjusts prices to food freshness and American Gen Z find faith in spirituality.

Patagonia starts a community-led energy revolution

We the Power by Patagonia

Europe – Outdoor brand Patagonia is empowering neighbourhoods across Europe to re-imagine energy systems, focusing on local and community benefits.

Its latest campaign film, We the Power, spotlights cooperatives across the continent that are working towards renewable energy solutions. From Germany’s Black Forest to the streets of ancient Girona and the rooftops of London, each is shown breaking down legislative barriers to prioritise energy from local sources. Through the campaign, Patagonia is encouraging citizens to imagine a new energy system that is community-owned and in turn supports local jobs and those in energy poverty.

‘Community energy is a win-win situation, whereby local, renewable energy production puts money directly into local communities and speeds up the creation of a cleaner, healthier future for our children,’ says Beth Thoren, environmental action and initiatives director of Patagonia.

The initiative echoes the ideas we identify in Equilibrium Cities, in which we forecast a future of city super-networks that will emerge to re-align the power between major and regional cities.

A regenerative bar building booze from food waste

 Re designed in collaboration with Alfred, Sydney  Re designed in collaboration with Alfred, Sydney
 RE designed in collaboration with Alfred, Sydney  RE designed in collaboration with Alfred, Sydney

Sydney – With a zero-waste policy, Australian bar Re serves as a blueprint for how bars can operate in the future.

Marking a world first when it comes to permanent bar locations, Re is pioneering a regenerative hospitality experience, from its drinks to its interiors. The venue, designed in collaboration with creative production company Alfred, features furnishings made from recycled bottles and Tupperware, along with structural features made from milk bottles.

Re’s cordials, syrups and tinctures are all created from leftover food products that would typically be wasted. Experimental cocktails such as Play That Fungi Music, for example, make use of salvaged mushrooms. According to Matt Whiley, co-founder of Re, the bar aims to be zero-waste in due course: ‘Traditionally, the bar industry has been incredibly wasteful. I'm not saying that we're going to be zero-waste from day one, but we're going to try bloody hard to get there.’

While we’ve previously identified the rise of zero-waste dining innovations, Re showcases how regenerative hospitality can also thrive in the drinks industry.

This Milan supermarket incentivises off-price groceries

Milan and Israel – Italian supermarket group Iper is using electronic labels to make it easier for consumers to buy foods based on their expiry date.

The store is working with Israel-based technology start-up Wasteless to feature electronic price tags that lower the cost of groceries in real time. Using algorithms, the prices are adjusted depending on expiry date, as well as the time of day and popularity of particular food items. Through this system, Iper can significantly reduce grocery waste, while consumers are financially incentivised to shop more sustainably.

While we’ve been tracking the evolution of Wasteless since 2017, the new collaboration aims to break down the stigma attached to buying off-price items. Oded Omer, founder and CEO of Wasteless, explains: ‘Now, consumers can make shopping decisions that reward their sustainable behaviour, and there is no stigma that the shopper is sacrificing anything or buying second-rate items.’

Wasteless is just one disruptor championing sustainable solutions that work towards Food Waste Innovation.

Wasteless in collaboration with Iper, Milan

Stat: Generation Z retain faith in religious ideals

Doug Wheeler installation at David Zwirner, New York Doug Wheeler installation at David Zwirner, New York

While many conventional forms of religious practice are being shunned, a new study by Springtide Research Institute reveals that young consumers in the US are adopting religion in new ways.

According to the research, 71% of Generation Z consider themselves to be at least slightly religious, despite having little interest in engaging with religious institutions. But only 13% of respondents say they are very religious.

The study also explores the changing language around religion – those practising non-Christian faiths such as Buddhism, Hinduism and Judaism are more likely to call themselves ‘spiritual’ rather than ‘religious’. Interestingly, the 65% of agnostic Gen Z also consider themselves to be spiritual.

Particularly during a year of isolation, young people have been seeking comfort through various channels, adopting spiritual beliefs as a way of finding solace and meaning. This taps into the themes of our Young Believers microtrend, as young people redefine the aesthetics, rituals and values of faith.

Previous Daily Signals Articles
Channel 4 captures the raw energy of women’s football in new campaign

Daily Signals

Channel 4 captures the raw energy of women’s football in new campaign

Channel 4 has launched Pure Football, a mixed media campaign celebrating its coverage of the Adobe Women’s FA Cup, placing authenticity and fan cul...
Marketing : Channel 4 : Womens Sport
What Remedy Place’s NAD+ pen reveals about the future of longevity treatments

Daily Signals

What Remedy Place’s NAD+ pen reveals about the future of longevity treatments

Social wellness club Remedy Place is bringing clinical wellness into the home with a new NAD+ Smart Pen, developed in partnership with UK-based NAD...
Wellness : Longevity : Health
Stat: How happiness is reshaping policymaking priorities

Daily Signals

Stat: How happiness is reshaping policymaking priorities

The 2026 World Happiness Report reinforces wellbeing as a critical measure of progress, drawing on nationally representative data from ne...
Social Media : Gen Z : Statistic
Huggies puts its product claims to the ultimate stress test

Daily Signals

Huggies puts its product claims to the ultimate stress test

Nappy brand Huggies’ latest campaign, Expensive Sh*t’, sees 18 babies wearing Huggies Little Snugglers on luxury goods worth £373,000 ($500,000, €4...
Advertising : Humour : Parenting
What Zara’s archival strategy signals for the future of high street retail

Daily Signals

What Zara’s archival strategy signals for the future of high street retail

Fashion retailer Zara is repositioning itself between mass market and luxury with a two-year partnership with acclaimed fashion designer John Galli...
Retail : Fashion : Design
Stat: Parents sound alarm as children’s digital identities form too early

Daily Signals

Stat: Parents sound alarm as children’s digital identities form too early

A new survey from Proton reveals that concern about children’s online privacy has become the norm, not the exception, as digital identities are for...
Online Safety : Parenting : Statistic
How WMH&I is uniting land and people through design

Daily Signals

How WMH&I is uniting land and people through design

Environmental charity Natural Habitat has unveiled a new identity by WMH&I, designed to reconnect communities with land through emotionally res...
Sustainability : Design : Branding
Foresight Friday: Savannah Scott, creative director

Daily Signals

Foresight Friday: Savannah Scott, creative director

Every Friday, we offer an end-of-week wrap-up of the topics, issues, ideas and virals we’re all talking about. This week, our creative director Sav...
Foresight Friday : SXSW : Creativity
Stat: Gen Z turns to social for food inspiration as video dominates media habits

Daily Signals

Stat: Gen Z turns to social for food inspiration as video dominates media habits

Gen Z’s media habits are evolving rapidly, with video platforms and social feeds reshaping how young audiences consume content – and what influence...
Drinks : Social Media : Inspiration
SXSW 2026: How can brands move on the pulse of culture? 

Daily Signals

SXSW 2026: How can brands move on the pulse of culture? 

On day three of SXSW 2026, the conversation turned to one of the biggest buzzwords in modern marketing: community.
Global Events : SXSW : Marketing
You have 1 free Daily Signals remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN