The Telling Room call to submit Youth Writing and Youth Art Exploring Climate Change
Hi, educators! Share your student reach in our short Impact Survey đ Survey Link
April 14, 2023
Thought Question: What are some actions you could take to reduce the amount of clothes that end up in a landfill every year?
In Chileâs Atacama, the worldâs driest desert, people sort through piles of clothing searching for fashion items that can be reused. Unfortunately for the environment, there arenât enough waste pickers to recycle all of it.
That's because this area has become one of the worldâs fastest-growing dumps for clothes. That growth is because of âfast fashion.â That means clothing that is cheap and made quickly in large amounts.
A 2018 United Nations (UN) report said that the amount of clothes made doubled between 2000 and 2014. This was because people started buying 60% more clothing but not wearing it for long. The UN called it âan environmental and social emergency.â
The UN also said that 8% of greenhouse gas emissions come from making clothing. It also takes about 2,000 gallons of water to make a pair of jeans.
âEvery second, the equivalent of one garbage truck of textiles is landfilled or burned,â one UN report said.
Clothing can also take a long time to break down. The chemicals in them are also very toxic.
Chile became a clothing dump because of its tax-free port at Iquique. Every year, about 59,000 tons of clothing comes to this port. Most of it ends up in dumps.
Companies are trying to take advantage of the problem. One company is making yarn from discarded clothes. Another makes insulation panels from old clothing.
Photo from Reuters.