Shopping is often referred to as "retail therapy." Some suggest buying stuff, especially new clothes, can make you feel better. The problem is these positive emotions quickly vanish, while the excess clothes don't. In fact, fast fashion is a major contributor to the global waste problem, as clothing is now the fastest growing category of waste.1
You may feel that you're doing your part by donating unwanted clothes to charity or dropping them off in a store take-back bin, but most of it ends up benefiting no one. The sad reality is that a large portion of these discarded clothes — an estimated 85%2 — simply end up in a landfill somewhere, either locally or overseas.
In the featured CBC Marketplace report,3 journalist Charlsie Agro investigates the claims made by retail take-back programs and takes a Canadian family behind the scenes to show them what actually happens to the clothes donated at their local charity.
Charities, of course, promise to sell your secondhand clothes to people in need, while most store take-back programs promise your discards will be used to make new clothes. But how true are these claims?
What Actually Happens to Your Donated Clothing?
Once you've dropped off your clothing at a local donation center, what happens to them? Marketplace visits one of nine Salvation Army warehouses in Toronto where leftover textiles end up — the clothes that didn't sell or were too worn to be sold.
According to the head of donations for Salvation Army Canada, they've seen a 15% to 20% increase in the amount of clothing ending up here in the past two years alone. Fast fashion, she says, is a major driver of this increase.
According to Marketplace, Canadians are now buying 400% more clothes than they did in the 1980s. According to a 2014 report in The Atlantic,4 clothing purchases in the U.S. increased by about 500% in that same timeframe. In the U.S., an estimated 25 billion pounds of textile waste end up in landfills each year, Marketplace says.
What's worse, many textiles don't biodegrade well, thanks to the synthetic fibers used. Chemicals and toxic dyes are also released from these textiles, adding to our global water pollution problem. The sheer amount of textile waste being generated each year makes fast fashion one of the top polluting industries in the world, Marketplace says.
Very Few Clothing Articles Can Be or Are Recycled
In an effort to cut down on this textile waste, several major fashion brands have started take-back programs. Among them: Levis, Nike, H&M and Adidas. Stores are equipped with donation boxes, and their marketing frequently promises to recycle your old duds, thereby "closing the loop" and "making the old new."
The take-back programs relieve shoppers of guilt, making them feel they're actually doing something good. But it also promotes buying more new stuff, as many of them offer a discount on a new purchase with each drop-off.
The question is, are these take-back programs actually addressing the problem, or simply perpetuating it under a fake veneer of "conscious consumerism"? H&M ads promise to shred your old jeans and make new ones out of them. But are they really?
According to environmentalist Elizabeth Cline, who is interviewed in the program, less than 1% of clothing is actually recycled into new clothes. I:Collect, a recycling company in charge of the donations made to several major retailers, including H&M, claims 35% of donated clothing is recycled into items such as carpet padding, painters' cloths and insulation — not clothing.
One of the primary reasons so little of our textile waste is recycled is because most clothes are made with blended fibers that are difficult to separate and reuse.
Cline also points out that even full-fiber items such as pure cotton or wool are difficult to reuse as the recycling process diminishes the quality of the new item. "It weakens the cotton and wool strands," she says, "giving you a lesser product."
"The bottom line is, the technology just isn't there yet," Marketplace says. "It's way too expensive and time-consuming to make new clothes from old ones." Cline also believes that take-back programs are an "easy environmental win" for these companies.
It gives them an aura of sustainability while allowing them to continue business as usual, and not having to make any significant changes to their manufacturing and business model. In reality, the recycling programs have little impact on the root cause of the problem. "It doesn't make fast fashion any more sustainable," Cline says.
How Fast Does Fashion Need to Change?
As noted by Marketplace, the fashion industry used to have four seasons: Winter, summer, spring and fall. Today, collections are updated on a weekly, if not near-daily, basis! You can enter an H&M store on a Monday and Wednesday in the same week and find a new assortment of items.
Like Cline, Claudia Marsales, senior manager of waste and environmental management for Markham, Ontario, is also unimpressed by retailers' effort to recycle. Marsales tells Marketplace that at the current volume of sales, it would take fast fashion outlets 12 years to recycle what they sell in 48 hours.
In her view, take-back programs are a losing proposition and nothing more than a form of greenwashing. It does nothing to address "the broken business model of fast fashion," Marsales says.
Fast fashion retailers make too many clothes and sell them too inexpensively. The poor quality makes the clothes disposable, and a little back-end recycling is really just circumventing rather than addressing the real problems.
In short, the industry business model is the root issue, and recycling programs are a simple way to make the industry appear more responsible without actually altering the way they do business.
Donations Are Not Given to the Needy
Many are under the mistaken impression that their donations will be distributed to those in need, either locally or elsewhere. This, however, is not the case. According to a 2006 report by ABC News,5 upward of 90% of clothing donations to charitable organizations end up with textile recyclers.
Only 10% are offered for sale to struggling Americans looking for a bargain. Even when items are shipped overseas to areas such as Africa, they are sold, from one middleman to the next, not donated. Across the board, throughout the distribution chain, whatever cannot be sold always ends up in a landfill.
According to Marketplace, Nairobi, Kenya, is the No. 1 buyer of Western discards. It buys $22 million of discarded clothing from Canada alone each year. East Africa as a whole imported a whopping $151 billion worth of used clothing from the West in 2015.6
So, many of the near-unused clothes you gave away for free are ultimately sold for profit at used clothes markets in Kenya and other less affluent nations. Low quality is a problem, though, as it makes the clothes hard to sell.
Kenyans simply don't want to spend their hard-earned money for something that will break or turn ragged within a few washes, and whatever doesn't sell at these local markets is again simply dumped in the trash or burned.
Africa Doesn't Want Your Discards
Imports of second-hand clothing into the African continent have actually become a serious waste problem. It's also threatening locals' ability to make a living. Used clothes sell for less than 10% of the cost of a locally made garment, making the local garment industry incapable of competing.7
The problem finally became so great that in March 2016, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Burundi and Rwanda proposed a ban on all imports of used clothing by 2019 in order to boost local textile and clothing industries.8
In August 2016, Tanzania's minister of state also announced the implementation of a tailor training program aimed at educating a new generation in the art of textile making and sewing.9
A February 2018 report10 by Aljazeera noted that Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda agreed to implement the ban, but face "threats of trade sanctions from the U.S. who says the ban violates free-trade agreements." Kenya has stated it could not adhere to the proposed 2019 ban deadline as the domestic textile production was still unable to meet local demands.11
How Can You Be Part of the Solution?
At the end, Marketplace addresses the question that's bound to be on your mind at this point: What do you do with the clothes you no longer want? The primary solution should be obvious: Buy less. Buying only what you actually need will allow you to spend more on high-quality items that last. A well-made piece of clothing could easily remain usable for years, if not decades.
If an item is still in good condition but for whatever reason doesn't fit your body or lifestyle anymore, ask around to see if anyone wants or needs it first. Some people have started doing clothing swap meets, which is a great way to minimize waste and help each other out financially.
Local women's shelters and crisis centers may also accept your donations. As a last-ditch resort, donate clothing that is still in good condition to a reputable charity that serves the needs of your local community. Your local church charity, for example, may distribute them to the needy within your community. Upcycling is another option. See if there are any local quilters in your area, for example, and donate suitable fabrics to them.
At the end of the day, though, the true answer lies in reducing your total consumption. A topic not discussed by Marketplace, but which goes hand in hand with disposable fashion is the harsh reality of sweatshop workers who suffer to produce the goods we buy on the cheap and discard with nary a thought of what it took to make it.
Think about it: How would a retailer be able to sell a T-shirt for $5 unless they paid next to nothing for the labor to make it? Equally concerning is the environmental pollution caused by the textile industry.
Textile Industry Is a Major Source of Other Pollution as Well
More than 60 different chemical classes are used in the production of yarn, fabric pretreatments and finishing.12 When fabrics are manufactured, between 10% and 100% of the weight of the fabric is added in chemicals.13 Even fabrics made from 100% nonorganic cotton are coated with 27% of its weight in chemicals.14,15
Not only can these chemicals affect human health when worn, but they also end up in our environment — both during the initial processing and once the clothing is discarded in a landfill. As noted in the book "Environmental Deterioration and Human Health," in the chapter dedicated to the health effects of textile industry wastewater:16
"Textile effluent is a cause of significant amount of environmental degradation and human illnesses. About 40% of globally used colorants contain organically bound chlorine, a known carcinogen. Chemicals evaporate into the air we breathe or are absorbed through our skin; they show up as allergic reactions and may cause harm to children even before birth.
Due to this chemical pollution, the normal functioning of cells is disturbed and this, in turn, may cause alteration in the physiology and biochemical mechanisms of animals resulting in impairment of important functions like respiration, osmoregulation, reproduction, and even mortality.
Heavy metals, present in textile industry effluent, are not biodegradable; hence, they accumulate in primary organs in the body and over time begin to fester, leading to various symptoms of diseases.
Thus, untreated or incompletely treated textile effluent can be harmful to both aquatic and terrestrial life by adversely affecting the natural ecosystem and causing long-term health effects."
Conscious Consumer Considerations
In the past, I had not really given much thought to the clothes I wear, and was shocked to learn about the environmental damage occurring as a result of today's fast and cheap fashion. Now I typically acquire five new pieces of clothing a year and this is usually replacement underwear.
I've since dedicated myself to wearing sustainably produced organic clothing and supporting the "Care What You Wear" movement. I also added a line of organic clothing grown and sewn in the USA to my webstore, and we support the SITO brand — a GOTS-certified organic clothing brand by the biodynamic certification agency Demeter.
You can learn more about these certifications (and the reason they’re so important) in my 2017 interview with Marci Zaroff, founder of the first organically certified textile mill in the U.S.
The Mercola-RESET Biodynamic Organic Project is also helping 55 certified organic farmers in India convert to biodynamic production of cotton on 110 acres of land. Biodynamic farming is organic by nature, but it goes even further, operating on the premise that the farm be regenerative and entirely self-sustaining.
Biodynamic farming brings animals and plants together to form a living web of life, a self-sustaining ecosystem that benefits the surrounding community. RESET (Regenerate, Environment, Society, Economy, Textiles) will pay all organic biodynamic farmers in our project a 25% premium over conventional cotton prices, which will be paid directly to the farmers. You can learn more about this in “Why I’m Paying Farmers to Convert to Biodynamic Cotton.”
So, going forward, do give some serious thought to cleaning up and “greening” your wardrobe. Remember, being a conscious consumer does not stop at food and household products. Your clothing can be a source of hazardous chemicals, and cheaply made fast fashion items take a tremendous toll on the environment and the people working in the industry.
As a consumer, your choices will help guide the fashion industry toward more humane and environmentally sane manufacturing processes, and not just stopping short at a façade of sustainability through take-back recycling programs that do very little to curtail our global textile waste and environmental pollution problems.
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