Closed-Loop Recycling: From Trash To Treasure
Textile Value Chain
|July 2025
The fashion industry, celebrated for its creativity and perpetual transformation, significantly contributes to global waste and pollution.
Introduction
The growth of fast fashion has resulted in millions of tons of textiles being thrown away annually, ultimately landing in landfills or incinerators. This situation has created an urgent demand for sustainable solutions, among which closed-loop recycling stands out as a promising innovation—a system intended to maintain materials in continuous circulation, thereby minimising waste and environmental damage.
Closed-loop recycling offers an alternative to the traditional “take-make-dispose” model by ensuring that textile waste is recovered, processed, and transformed into new garments. This approach conserves valuable resources and significantly reduces the fashion industry's carbon footprint. This article will explore the concept of closed-loop recycling, its benefits, challenges, and the brands leading the way toward a more sustainable future.
Understanding Closed-Loop Recycling
The Linear vs. Circular Fashion Economy
Traditionally, the fashion industry follows a linear economy—a system where clothes are manufactured, used for a short period, and then discarded. This cycle contributes to enormous textile waste and excessive resource consumption. In contrast, closed-loop recycling follows a circular model, ensuring that textiles are continually reused, either by breaking them down into raw materials for new fabrics or repurposing them into new clothing items.
How Does It Work?The closed-loop recycling process involves several key steps:
1. Collection of Used Garments
a. Consumers return old or unwanted clothes through brand take-back programs, donation centres, or textile recycling bins.
2. Sorting and Fibre Identification
Dit verhaal komt uit de July 2025-editie van Textile Value Chain.
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