Environmental Cost of FASHION. WE All Pay IT!
- Textiles make up roughly 10% of all plastic waste globally and waste from synthetic fibres is projected to more than double by 2060.
- Between 2010 and 2022, the reported export weight of used clothing by OECD Member countries has increased by 59%.
- Under current policies, plastic waste generated from synthetic textiles is projected to more than double by 2060.
- EPR schemes can enable re-use and recycling by supporting separate waste collection, while transferring the costs from governments to producers.
Source: OECD - Read the paper
THE DARK SIDE of FASHION INDUSTRY
Fashion production makes up 10% of humanity’s carbon emissions, dries up water sources, and pollutes rivers and streams. What’s more, 85% of all textiles go to the dump each year (UNECE, 2018), and washing some types of clothes sends significant amount of microplastics into the ocean.
Fashion production makes up 10% of humanity’s carbon emissions, dries up water sources, and pollutes rivers and streams. What’s more, 85% of all textiles go to the dump each year (UNECE, 2018), and washing some types of clothes sends significant amount of microplastics into the ocean.
Fast fashion has a HUGE environmental and social cost. But it is an almost a tabu subject. We know that the impacts of the fashion industry in terms of pollution, water use, carbon emissions, human rights, and gender inequality are increasing, but close our eyes. Why? Because we love fashion and .. the fashion industry values more than 2.5 trillion $USD and employing over 75 million people worldwide, with a spectacular growth over the past decades, as clothing production doubled between 2000 and 2014. While people bought 60% more garments in 2014 than in 2000, they only kept the clothes for half as long (McKinsey & Company, 2016).
Fast facts:
More facts and sources on Business Insider
Human cost: textile workers, primarly women in developing countries, are often paid derisory wages and forced to work long hours in appalling conditions (UNEP, 2018; WRI, 2019). In many places, these conditions create infringements on human rights (Human Rights Watch). Use of chemicals in clothes production also raise serious health concerns, both for the workers in the industry and consumers. Additional impacts on health also arise from the pollution described previously.
The environmental and social cost of the fashion industry should make us rethink fast fashion, and stresses the need for more sustainable business models and practices. Resources hereunder provide additional information on the environmental impacts of fashion, and potential pathways for change.
More information here:
Fast facts:
- The equivalent of one garbage truck full of clothes is burned or dumped in a landfill every second (UNEP, 2018)
- Approximately 60% of all materials used by the fashion industry are made from plastic (UNEP, 2019)
- 500,000 tons of microfibers are released into the ocean each year from washing clothes — the equivalent of 50 billion plastic bottles (Ellen MacArthur Foundation, 2017)
- The fashion industry is responsible for 8-10% of humanity’s carbon emissions – more than all international flights and maritime shipping combined (UNEP, 2018). If the fashion sector continues on its current trajectory, that share of the carbon budget could jump to 26% by 2050 (Ellen MacArthur Foundation, 2017)
- Some 93 billion cubic metres of water – enough to meet the needs of five million people – is used by the fashion industry annually, contributing significantly to water scarcity in some regions (UNCTAD, 2020)
- Around 20% of industrial wastewater pollution worldwide originates from the fashion industry (WRI, 2017)
More facts and sources on Business Insider
Human cost: textile workers, primarly women in developing countries, are often paid derisory wages and forced to work long hours in appalling conditions (UNEP, 2018; WRI, 2019). In many places, these conditions create infringements on human rights (Human Rights Watch). Use of chemicals in clothes production also raise serious health concerns, both for the workers in the industry and consumers. Additional impacts on health also arise from the pollution described previously.
The environmental and social cost of the fashion industry should make us rethink fast fashion, and stresses the need for more sustainable business models and practices. Resources hereunder provide additional information on the environmental impacts of fashion, and potential pathways for change.
More information here:
- A Zero Waste Vision for Fashion – Chapter 1: All We Need Is Less | Zero Waste Europe | 4 September 2023
- New Analysis Shows How Fashion Industry Can Lighten its Carbon Footprint | UNFCCC | 31 July 2023
- Clothed in chemicals: A new book sheds light on the toxic substances we wear daily | GRIST | 28 July 2023
- Fashion Industry Needs to Make Climate Action a Top Trend | UNFCCC | 27 March 2023
- Fibre recyclée : beaucoup de marketing, peu d’écologie (Video) | RTS | 17 January 2023
- La fast fashion « utilise des stratégies marketing redoutables pour rendre les jeunes accros » | Mélanie Ohayon | Genève Vision | 17 January 2023
- Chile’s Atacama Desert: Where Fast Fashion Goes to Die | EcoWatch | 15 November 2021
- Effective regulations? Environmental impact assessment in the textile and garment sector in Bangladesh, Cambodia, Indonesia and Viet Nam | ILO | 14 June 2021
- Can an end-to-end sustainability standard change fashion? | VogueBusiness | 18 March 2021
- Plastic microfibres illustrate the challenges of fighting marine litter | GRID-Arendal | 4 March 2021
- Fast fashion speeding toward environmental disaster, report warns | The Guardian | 7 April 2020
- Can fashion ever be sustainable? | BBC | 11 March 2020
- These facts show how unsustainable the fashion industry is | World Economic Forum | 31 January 2020
- The huge toll of ‘fast fashion’ on the planet – and why the answer could be circular | National Geographic | 4 July 2019
- Fashion’s tiny hidden secret | UNEP | 13 March 2019
- By the numbers: the economic, social and environmental impacts of “fast fashion” | WRI | 10 January 2019
- The global environmental injustice of fast fashion | Bick et al. | Environmental Health | 27 December 2018
- Putting the brakes on fast fashion | UNEP | 12 November 2018
- Fashion is an environmental and social emergency, but can also drive progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals | UNECE | 1 March 2018
- Timeout for fast fashion | Greenpeace
- Geneva Environment Network
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