FASHION'S environmental COST
Fashion accounts for approximately 10% of global carbon emissions ~ more than international aviation and maritime shipping combined. It is the second-largest consumer of water globally, using an estimated 93 billion cubic metres per year. It generates roughly 92 million tonnes of textile waste annually, the vast majority of which ends up in landfill or is incinerated.
Textile dyeing and finishing is responsible for approximately 20% of global industrial water pollution. And synthetic textiles ~ which now account for approximately 69% of all fibres used in clothing ~ shed microplastics with every wash, contributing an estimated 500,000 tonnes of microfibres to the oceans each year.
The fashion industry produces more greenhouse gas emissions than France, Germany, and the United Kingdom combined. The water used to produce a single cotton t-shirt ~ approximately 2,700 litres ~ is enough for one person to drink for 900 days. And the microplastics shed from synthetic clothing have been found in the deepest ocean trenches, in Arctic ice, in rainwater, and in human blood.
