According to the non-profit Earth Pledge, today some 8,000 synthetic chemicals are used throughout the world to turn raw materials into textiles. Domestically, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reports that one-quarter of all pesticides used nationwide go toward growing cotton, primarily for the clothing industry. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency considers many domestic textile manufacturing facilities to be hazardous waste generators; and lax standards and enforcement in developing countries, where the majority of textiles are produced, means that untold amounts of pollution are likely being deposited into local soils and waterways in regions that can hardly stand further environmental insult.
Luz Claudio, writing in Environmental Health Perspectives, considers the way Americans and Europeans shop for clothes as “waste couture”: Fashion is low-quality and sold at “prices that make the purchase tempting and the disposal painless.” Yet this sort of so-called “fast fashion” leaves a pollution footprint, with each step of the clothing life cycle generating potential environmental and occupational hazards.
According to Technical Textile Markets, a quarterly trade publication, demand for man-made fibers such as petroleum-derived polyester has nearly doubled in the last 15 years. “The manufacture of polyester and other synthetic fabrics is an energy-intensive process requiring large amounts of crude oil,” reports Claudio. In addition, she says, the processes emit volatile organic compounds and solvents, particulate matter, acid gases such as hydrogen chloride, and other production by-products into the air and water.
“Issues of environmental health and safety do not apply only to the production of man-made fabrics,” says Claudio, citing subsidies to the pesticide-laden cotton industry that keep prices low and production high.
In an effort to green up the industry, Earth Pledge launched its FutureFashion initiative in 2005 to promote the use of renewable, reusable and non-polluting materials and production methods. Besides putting on its own FutureFashion showcases, the group organized the January 2008 New York Fashion Week, encouraging designers to create and showcase greener clothing on their runway models. Green-leaning designers can also pick through Earth Pledge’s library of 600 sustainably produced textiles, including organic cotton as well as exotic materials such as sasawashi, pina, bamboo, milk protein, and sea leather.
Another effort underway to speed the fashion industry into a carbon-constrained future is the Ethical Fashion Forum, which provides a variety of tools and resources and runs training sessions and networking events to help facilitate moving the industry towards more sustainable practices.
One stumbling block to the greening of fashion is that only a small number of consumers—some analysts say less than one percent—will pay more for a greener shirt. But if the industry itself can improve its footprint from the inside and drive the costs of more eco-friendly materials and processes down, the benefits will trickle down to consumers, whether they are bargain-conscious or fashion-conscious.
CONTACTS: Environmental Health Perspectives, www.ehponline.org; Earth Pledge, www.earthpledge.org; Ethical Fashion Forum, www.ethicalfashionforum.com.
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November 16th, 2009 at 1:41 am
Thanks. So where can we get access to these greener clothes?
November 16th, 2009 at 6:12 am
Second hand clothes are the best source of green clothes. They have already been produced. There is no processing involved or shipping, only has the enviromental impact of driving to purchase them. For new clothes, many stores are carrying lines of organic cotton clothes and recycled polyester clothes. I just bought Matthew and Kyle sweats from Hanes from Target in the US that have recycle plastic bottle fibers in their clothes. They were only $5 each. Au Cotton has some organic clothes and old navy too. I would research it a little more if you are going out of your way to purchase these products.
November 16th, 2009 at 6:50 am
Thank you for this, Amelia. I know some people who are against fur and leather, etc but they don’t talk about how fake fur and pleather are so very harmful to the environment. Not to mention cotton and synthetics. The right choices are very hard to make since they aren’t very accessible (location and cost). If you have anymore information on where we can find organic cotton, I would be very interested. Unfortunately, whenever I shop second hand I come up empty, even in the high-end consignment shops.
November 20th, 2009 at 9:42 am
Good to know, I get most of the kids’ clothes through hand-me-downs or second-hand. Other than some birthday or Christmas presents of new clothes, I think about 90-95% of their stuff falls under green clothes. I never thought of it that way, but it’s great to know.
November 24th, 2009 at 6:52 am
Pam,
MEC and Cotton Ginny in Candad carry organic cotton clothing. I found another website online that has dressier organic cotton clothes.
http://www.mountainsofthemoon.com/
Have you thought about hemp? Here is a site that talks about the benefit of hemp, something else to think about.
http://www.harbay.net/benefits.html
Hope this is a good starting point. Will update as I find more stores.