The global denim industry is entering a critical transition phase after the ZDHC Foundation added potassium permanganate to its Chemical Watchlist. This decision increases regulatory and compliance attention on one of the most controversial chemicals used in garment finishing.

Potassium permanganate spray, widely known as PP spray, has long been used to create localized vintage effects on denim. However, concerns about worker exposure to hazardous micro particles and unsafe factory conditions have grown in recent years.
The Watchlist inclusion reflects a broader industry consensus that PP spray creates occupational and environmental risks. Industry assessments show that millions of denim workers remain exposed to PP spray processes, especially in developing manufacturing hubs where traditional finishing methods are still widely used.
The update represents more than a technical compliance change. It signals a structural shift toward stricter chemical management across global textile supply chains.
Spanish textile technology company Jeanologia has called on brands, laundries, and manufacturers to accelerate the phase out of PP spray. The company says the industry already has scalable alternatives that can deliver the same aesthetic results without chemical spraying.
Jeanologia states that it eliminated the need for PP spray in industrial production in 2015 through laser-based finishing systems, combined with Light Bright technology and G2 Ozone solutions. These systems enable precise digital control of fading effects while reducing chemical use, water consumption, and workplace risks.
In its Innovations and Challenges in Denim Finishing 2024 report, Jeanologia’s Environmental Impact Measuring platform identifies potassium permanganate as one of the remaining high-risk processes in garment finishing. The report highlights that laser technologies are no longer experimental. They are now viable industrial solutions that align with sustainability and compliance requirements.
Denim manufacturing is increasingly shaped by ESG reporting standards, supply chain transparency demands, and stricter chemical management frameworks driven by global brands and retailers.
Sustainability targets are now directly linked to sourcing decisions. As a result, factories that adopt chemical-free and digitally controlled finishing technologies are gaining competitive advantages in international markets.
Over the past decade, innovation has already transformed several hazardous denim processes. Sandblasting has largely disappeared from compliant supply chains.
Automation, laser finishing, and ozone washing are gradually replacing manual scraping and heavy chemical treatments. The latest move by the ZDHC Foundation suggests that PP spray may follow the same path.
The denim sector now faces a strategic decision. It can continue legacy chemical practices, or it can move toward a safer, digitally managed future of garment finishing.

