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Plastic To Water Pollution: Why The Fashion Industry NEEDS To Change Its Practices

Beauty has always attracted the human soul, so everybody tries to look beautiful. It is human nature that everybody tries to look different from others by wearing fashionable clothes and following the latest fashion trends. Fashion trends are changing swiftly and this change has a direct impact on our society. As per research, fashion can possibly become a main reason for the changing socio-economic and political scenario.

Although some people are of the opinion that fashion industry helps the thriving creative capabilities of society, but it also has many negative impacts on our society. Every segment of society is trying to follow the latest fashion trends and those who fail start feeling a kind of inferiority complex. The youth, who are supposed to be the main asset of a nation, are more obsessed towards fashions and their ultimate goal of life has become to follow the unwinnable race of style.

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I feel that the latest fashion is diverting the minds of the youth. They are focusing more on fashion than their career and livelihood. God has set a limit on every process of the universe. The secret of beauty lies within the fixed limits, and anything which surpasses the limits faces the destruction. When we adopt the unacceptable fashions and cross the limits we are going to face ruination, because these fashions do not only have a direct impact on our lifestyles and socio-economic system, but they also affect our environment and climate.

Like all other industries, the fashion industry is also one of the reasons for environmental havoc. Last year, a special report was issued by the United Nations in one of its conferences stating that the fashion industry is one of the main culprits responsible for climatic change. According to the report, two thousand gallons of water are wasted for preparing just one piece of jeans which is sufficient for around seven years-need of an individual. The fashion industry uses around 93 billion gallons of water yearly. which can fulfil the need of approximately 50 lakh people.

World over, fashion industries contribute a total of 20% effluents which are harmful to water bodies. As per reports, 8% of greenhouse gases are contributed by the cloth and shoe industry, and if the situation will remain the same, the percentage may go as high as 50% in the next ten years. According to the reports, one truck of wastes is either burnt or thrown every second.

Besides the fabric and shoe industries, all the industries associated with the manufacturing of beautifying and decorative items are equally responsible for environmental degradation and climate change. In ancient times, natural ingredients were used to for face and skin, but nowadays different companies manufacture different types of face washes, shampoos, body lotions, shaving creams and shaving lotions for the same purpose. David Suzuki, a Japanese politician, has written extensively on environmental degradation. He writes that face washes contain minute plastic particles which are non-recyclable and these particles are very harmful to aquatic life.

According to one of the report, 90% wastes from kitchens is usually recycled but 50% wastes from washrooms can’t be recycled which flows with water through drains and rivers and ultimately finds its place in oceans. Further, 27 billion plastic bottles reach the oceans yearly, while more than 120 billion plastic products are manufactured by industries. To our surprise, around 75% of plastic in the world is used by fashion industries. One lac ninety thousand tons of plastic are used by fashion industry yearly, and it is expected that 12 billion tons of waste will be thrown on earth by fashion industries till 2050. According to the statistical numbers of leading environmental institutions, more than 10 thousand chemicals are used in the preparation of different beautifying items but only 11% among them are certified. It is surprising to know that 20% of water pollutants have their origin from textile industries.

Textile industries produce 1.5 trillion wastes yearly. According to reports of the United Nations, 20 tons of freshwater is used in manufacturing one ton of cotton while 750 million people in the world are without the availability of potable water. According to reports only 15% of clothes in the world are recycled or donated for reuse and the rest are thrown as waste and this waste makes 5.2% of total waste yearly thrown on the earth.

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Textile industries also use chemicals on a large scale. According to experts, one-kilogram chemicals are used to prepare one kilogram of textiles. 23% of chemicals in the world are used in fashion industries. Most of the greenhouse gases are emitted to the atmosphere from textile industries.

Every year, 70 million barrels of fuel oil are used in manufacturing polyester which is an important element of fashion industries. Silk industry has been famous from ancient times in the fashion world. Every year, 70 million trees are cut for the manufacturing of artificial silk, but only 30% of artificial silk is produced from these trees.

All the above statistical numbers are startling and we are deteriorating our environment in the race of fashions. We are degrading our environment to make our life comfy and fashionable. If we are going to use these beautifying chemical items at the same rate, our rivers and oceans will be completely filled with non-recyclable wastes in the near future and earth will become uninhabitable. Consciousness and awareness are necessary for saving our environment from degradation in the ‘craze’ of fashion. There is a need for change in the business model of the fashion industry.

Textile and other products need to be recycled and reused. Similarly, minimum or no plastic products should be used in face wash and other beautifying items. As long as our lifestyle will not change and we will follow the latest fashion trends, the fashion industry will keep producing items harmful for our environment. So there is a need to change our behaviour and change our lifestyle in order to save our environment from degradation. Above all, the government authorities should formulate strict laws for manufacturing industries in accordance with the environmental protection guidelines. In the end, it can be said that we should not follow the fashion trends at the cost of our existence.

About the author: The author is a columnist and teaches Geography at GDC, Kulgam. He can be reached at rather1294@gmail.com

Featured image for representation only.
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