Fast fashion is killing the planet. These chemists are fighting back | Shay Sethi, CEO of Ambercycle
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Up next ►► The ugly truth about toxic e-waste https://youtu.be/mjFDd1hFpuE
Our clothes don’t die — or, at least the non-biodegradable textiles that they’re made of don’t usually get a second life.
In 2018 alone, 11.3 million tons of those textile mixtures waste ended up in landfills, the EPA says. And the lion’s share of that waste comes from clothing — over a billion garments worth.
Fast fashion — a term used to describe an industry that relies on fast manufacturing and styles that quickly go out of vogue — is reliant on these textiles. A June 2021 report by London’s Royal Society for Arts (RSA) found that more than 80% of some offerings on websites contained new plastic in them, and despite recent media attention, clothing companies are still slow to adopt truly recycled garments into their product lines.
While there are clothes made from recycled polyester, calling them “recycled” is a bit disingenuous — in fashion, most polyester recycling pulls the plastic from water bottles, not clothing
Ambercycle CEO Shay Sethi is deploying a different, proprietary form of recycling, one that separates materials at the molecular level. It’s called chemical recycling, and the technique allows Ambercycle to pull plastic fibers from textiles, leaving the fibers unharmed and ready to be used in new clothes.
Read the full story here ►►https://www.freethink.com/series/justmightwork/polyester
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Read more of our stories on recycling:
Recycling robot keeps waste out of landfills
►► https://www.freethink.com/environment/recycling-robot
Can tech rentals solve the problem of electronic waste?
►► https://www.freethink.com/technology/electronic-waste
A sweet way to recycle cotton — turn it into sugar
►► https://www.freethink.com/environment/recycled-cotton-sugar
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About Freethink
No politics, no gossip, no cynics. At Freethink, we believe the daily news should inspire people to build a better world. While most media is fueled by toxic politics and negativity, we focus on solutions: the smartest people, the biggest ideas, and the most ground breaking technology shaping our future.
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Watch our original series:
► Hard Reset: https://freeth.ink/youtube-hard-reset
► Just Might Work: https://freeth.ink/youtube-just-might-work
► Challengers: https://freeth.ink/youtube-challengers
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Subscribe to Freethink on YouTube ►► https://freeth.ink/youtube-subscribe
Up next ►► The ugly truth about toxic e-waste https://youtu.be/mjFDd1hFpuE
Our clothes don’t die — or, at least the non-biodegradable textiles that they’re made of don’t usually get a second life.
In 2018 alone, 11.3 million tons of those textile mixtures waste ended up in landfills, the EPA says. And the lion’s share of that waste comes from clothing — over a billion garments worth.
Fast fashion — a term used to describe an industry that relies on fast manufacturing and styles that quickly go out of vogue — is reliant on these textiles. A June 2021 report by London’s Royal Society for Arts (RSA) found that more than 80% of some offerings on websites contained new plastic in them, and despite recent media attention, clothing companies are still slow to adopt truly recycled garments into their product lines.
While there are clothes made from recycled polyester, calling them “recycled” is a bit disingenuous — in fashion, most polyester recycling pulls the plastic from water bottles, not clothing
Ambercycle CEO Shay Sethi is deploying a different, proprietary form of recycling, one that separates materials at the molecular level. It’s called chemical recycling, and the technique allows Ambercycle to pull plastic fibers from textiles, leaving the fibers unharmed and ready to be used in new clothes.
Read the full story here ►►https://www.freethink.com/series/justmightwork/polyester
◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠
Read more of our stories on recycling:
Recycling robot keeps waste out of landfills
►► https://www.freethink.com/environment/recycling-robot
Can tech rentals solve the problem of electronic waste?
►► https://www.freethink.com/technology/electronic-waste
A sweet way to recycle cotton — turn it into sugar
►► https://www.freethink.com/environment/recycled-cotton-sugar
◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠◠
About Freethink
No politics, no gossip, no cynics. At Freethink, we believe the daily news should inspire people to build a better world. While most media is fueled by toxic politics and negativity, we focus on solutions: the smartest people, the biggest ideas, and the most ground breaking technology shaping our future.
◡◡◡◡◡◡◡◡◡◡◡◡◡◡◡◡◡◡◡
Watch our original series:
► Hard Reset: https://freeth.ink/youtube-hard-reset
► Just Might Work: https://freeth.ink/youtube-just-might-work
► Challengers: https://freeth.ink/youtube-challengers
Enjoy Freethink on your favorite platforms:
► Daily editorial features: http://www.freethink.com
► Solutions-based stories, straight to your inbox: https://www.freethink.com/subscribe
► Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/freethinkmedia
► Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freethink
► Twitter: https://twitter.com/freethinkmedia
► Join the Freethink forum: http://www.facebook.com/groups/freethinkforum
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