Why Fast Fashion is bad for the environment?

Posted on Aug 26th 2021



Fast Fashion is a term used to portray how cost brands rapidly produce garments inspired by recent trends and put them in stores for clients to access at a low cost. 

To keep clients coming and spending more money, the following two factors play the main role.

1. They make new items and designs each week compared to the two seasons that used to be the norm. 

2. The quality of the garments is very bad, making them break or look terrible after few washes. Since the costs are so low, it is likewise less expensive to purchase new garments than to fix the bad quality ones you currently have. Which is the reason Fast Fashion is sometimes called Disposable Fashion'. 

Another fact of Fast Fashion is that the garments move quickly from runway to the ownership of buyers and landfills. 

Why is Fast Fashion bad for the environment? 

The environmental effect, just like everything created, starts at the resources of materials to eternity when the piece is going to landfill. 

From developing cotton that needs a huge amount of water and the pesticides used to get bugs away from the plants to the unsafe synthetic compounds to transform bamboo into the fabric, to the harmful coloring strategies to the large numbers of barrels of oil that are utilized to make polyester every year, as well as releasing microplastics into the water when washed. 

"The clothing business represents 10% of worldwide fossil fuel emissions and stays the second biggest mechanical polluter, second only to oil. Fast fashion things are regularly worn under multiple times, saved for approximately 35 days, and produce more than 400% more fossil fuel emissions per item each year than articles of clothing worn multiple times and saved for an entire year." 

Some facts about Fast Fashion: 

- A pair of jeans produce as much ozone gases as driving a vehicle for 130km. 

- It takes 2,700 litres of water to make one cotton shirt, enough to meet the normal individual's drinking needs for over two years. 

- Textiles accounts for 34.8% of worldwide microplastic contamination. 

- A piece of clothing is worn only four times.

- 20% of worldwide industrial water contamination comes from the treating and dying of textiles. 

- It's assessed that we make 400 billion square meters of textiles yearly. Sixty billion square meters is cutting room floor waste. 

- Textiles produce 1.5 tons CO₂ per household yearly.