No One Wants Your Used Clothes Anymore
A once-virtuous cycle is breaking down.
What now?
For decades, the donation bin has offered consumers in rich countries a guilt-free way to unload their old clothing.
In a virtuous and profitable cycle, a global network of traders would collect these garments, grade them, and transport them around the world to be recycled, worn again, or turned into rags and stuffing.
Now that cycle is breaking down.
Fashion trends are accelerating, new clothes are becoming as cheap as used ones, and poor countries are turning their backs on the secondhand trade.
Without significant changes in the way that clothes are made and marketed, this could add up to an environmental disaster in the making.
...Between 2000 and 2015, global clothing production doubled, while the average number of times that a garment was worn before disposal declined by 36 percent.
In China, it declined by 70 percent.
The rise of "fast fashion" is thus creating a bleak scenario: The tide of secondhand clothes keeps growing even as the markets to reuse them are disappearing.
From an environmental standpoint, that's a big problem.
Already, the textile industry accounts for more greenhouse-gas emissions than all international flights and maritime shipping combined; as recycling markets break down, its contribution could soar..."
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