Franziska Mesche
Nov 6 · 6 min read

There is a lot of news out there these days about how flying, driving cars on gasoline and eating meat has a major impact on climate change and our eroding planet. But how much have you heard about our clothes being responsible for this burden?

Here are 5 truths about how the fashion industry is impacting our planet and people

The fashion industry … consumes more energy than the aviation and shipping industry combined.

1. The fashion industry is one of the most polluting industries in the world

The fashion industry leaves a massive footprint on our world.

According to the UN, the fashion industry, contributes to 10% of global greenhouse emissions, and consumes more energy than the aviation and shipping industry combined.

The textile industry relies on mostly non-renewable resources — including oil — to produce synthetic fibres, fertilisers to grow cotton, and chemicals to produce, dye and finish fibres and textiles.

If the industry continues on its current path, says the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, by 2050 it could use more than 26% of the carbon budget associated with a 2% global warming limit.

It can take 2,700 litres to produce the cotton needed to make a single t-shirt

2. The fashion industry is a major water consumer and polluter

Not only does the fashion industry leave a major carbon footprint on our world, it also consumes and pollutes shocking amounts of water.

To give you some numbers:

It can take 2,700 litres to produce the cotton needed to make a single t-shirt, according to the National Geographic.

To make only one pair of denim jeans, 10,000 litres of water are required to grow one kilo of cotton which is needed for the pair of jeans. In comparison, one person would take 10 years to drink 10,000 litres of water, says the UN.

There are also a huge amount of chemicals involved in the process of producing, dyeing and finishing textiles that will end up in our water systems.

Vibrant colours, prints and fabric finishes are attractive features of fashion garments, but many of these are achieved with toxic chemicals.

Textile dyeing is the second largest polluter of clean water globally, right after agriculture.

Some of them are toxic, bio-accumulative (meaning the substance builds up in an organism faster than the organism can get rid of it), disruptive to hormones and carcinogenic; some of these are banned or strictly regulated in some countries.

And to top it off, the fashion industry cumulatively produces about 20% of global waste water.

An average wash load of 6kg can release over 700,000 fibres per wash. Acrylic fibres take the lead with around 700,000 fibres per wash, followed by polyester with around 500,000 fibres per wash.

3. Fashion spills microfibres into our oceans

Washing our clothes from synthetic and non-natural textiles is assumed to contribute to a significant amount of microplastics in our environment, according to a research study from Plymouth University.

The researchers found that an average wash load of 6kg can release over 700,000 fibres per wash.

Acrylic fibres take the lead with around 700,000 fibres per wash, followed by polyester with around 500,000 fibres per wash.

When polyester clothes are washed in washing machines they release microfibres that add to the increasing levels of plastic in our oceans

But what does shedding fibres actually mean?

An article in Weforum summarises it quite well: Polyester is one of the most popular fibres used for clothing. Just check the labels of your clothes and you’ll find that most of your clothes are made out of polyester, and especially your sports clothes.

But what’s the problem with this?

Well, when polyester clothes are washed in washing machines they release microfibres that add to the increasing levels of plastic in our oceans.

These microfibres are extremely tiny particles and can easily pass through sewage and wastewater treatment plants into our waterways.

And because they do not biodegrade, they pose a serious threat to marine life. Small creatures such as plankton eat the microfibres, which then make their way up the food chain to fish and other seafood that we, humans, eat.

There is a lot of talk about PET bottles and other bigger plastics in our oceans right now — but we should not forget that a potentially even bigger threat are the tiny microplastics in our oceans which can’t be collected from our oceans the way PET bottles can — and this way can cause even more harm to our environment, animal life and ultimately to our health.

As cheap and trendy clothing becomes easily available and affordable, we buy much more clothes, use them less, and throw it away much faster. Ultimately, our planet, and ourselves, have to pay the price for it.

4. The amount of clothes we consume each year is skyrocketing

In the documentary The True Cost, it says that the world now consumes about 80 billion new pieces of clothing every year — this is 400% more than the amount we consumed just 20 years ago.

According to the Ellen McArthur Foundation, this massive upward spiral is driven by a growing middle-class population across the world and increased per capita sales in developed economies. An expected 400 percent increase in world GDP by 2050 will mean even greater demand for clothing.

But not only do we consume much more clothes than we did just two decades ago, we also throw away our clothes much faster: The average American now generates 82 pounds of textile waste each year.

85% of textiles end up in landfills or are incinerated when most of these materials could be reused, says the UN.

To sum this all up — “fast fashion” is the new norm: As cheap and trendy clothing becomes easily available and affordable, we buy much more clothes, use them less, and throw it away much faster. Ultimately, our planet, and ourselves, have to pay the price for it.

Knowing the facts behind what we are consuming every single day, like clothes, is super important so that we can make better decisions in the future

5. We are made to feel “out of trend” after one week

You probably notice that the clothes you see in the stores of your favourite shopping brands change quite often. And this might give you the feeling that you need to constantly buy their new clothes to stay on top of the latest trends. What you bought one month ago might already feel out-of-date today.

So what is happening here?

To increase consumption, “fast fashion” brands have innovated their production and distribution cycles, sometimes getting the garment from the designer to the customer in a matter of a few weeks, instead of months. The number of fashion seasons has increased from two a year to 50–100 micro-seasons in one year.

With new seasons being released almost every week, fast fashion companies want us to buy as many garments as possible, as fast as possible. That’s the business model — and has worked for quite some time.

With new trends coming out every week, the goal of fast fashion is for consumers to buy as many garments as possible, as quickly as possible.

First step: Awareness

If we want to make better consumption choices in the future, we have to understand the problem first.

Knowing the facts behind what we are consuming every single day, like clothes, is super important so that we can make better decisions in the future.

The more people are aware, the better choices we can make, and the bigger of a change we can achieve.

Franziska Mesche

Written by

Sports, health & nature enthusiast I Founder of Tripulse; making fitness sustainable: https://tripulse.co/ & https://www.instagram.com/tripulse.co/

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