Prøve GULL - Gratis
Fast Fashion Needs a Green Makeover
Scientific American
|October 2025
A more circular economy in textiles will look good on everyone
-

PEOPLE IN THE U.S. throw away at least 17 million tons of textiles every year—about 100 pounds of clothing per person. At the same time, unsold blouses, jackets, and other fashion-industry leftovers end up in dumps such as the one in Chile’s Atacama Desert, so vast as to be visible from space. Many of these items are fast fashion—made quickly, sold cheaply, and in style for too short a time because the industry relies on novelty to keep consumers buying.
Fashion poses more than an aesthetic problem, however. Every year the global garment industry emits up to 10 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas output and uses enough water to fill at least 37 million Olympic-size swimming pools, as an article in this magazine noted this past July. Cotton farming can involve massive quantities of pesticides, and yarn dyeing pollutes waterways with toxic chemicals. Synthetic polymers such as nylon are made with fossil fuels and shed microfibers with every wash.
It’s time to embrace a circular economy in fashion—one that reuses clothes, fabrics and yarn; recycles to the extent possible; and encourages producers and retailers to choose textiles and processes that minimize the input of raw resources such as cotton or synthetic polymers. Our choices as consumers matter as well. How we select fashion and follow trends is one accessible way we can make a dent in climate change.
Almost one third of the clothes produced every season are never sold and may go straight to landfills.
Denne historien er fra October 2025-utgaven av Scientific American.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Scientific American

Scientific American
How a Tiny Brain Region Guides Generosity
Whether and how much we help others may be determined by the brain's basolateral amygdala
6 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Biological Age vs. Chronological Age
Investigating the science and hype of biological age tests
6 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Search Broadly
The way you search the Internet can reinforce your beliefs—without you realizing it
2 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Why Knot
Mathematicians unravel a long-standing conjecture about knot theory
2 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
The Landslide in Your Backyard
As climate change brings more intense rain to the mountains, dangerous debris flows are on the rise
14 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Fast Fashion Needs a Green Makeover
A more circular economy in textiles will look good on everyone
4 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Neural Stretch
Scientists map a mouse's peripheral nervous system in unprecedented detail
2 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
A Block-Stacking Problem with a Preposterous Solution
In principle, this impossible math allows for a glue-free bridge of stacked blocks that can stretch across the Grand Canyon- and into infinity
5 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Decoding Blood
New biomarkers promise easier and earlier detection of Alzheimer's, but the results aren't always clear
9 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Science Makes the U.S. a Great Nation
History tells us what happens when great nations attack science
4 mins
October 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size