impact of non sustainable clothing on health
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Answer:
The environmental impact of this behaviour is significant: the clothing and textile industry is depleting non-renewable resources, emitting huge quantities of greenhouses gases and using massive quantities of energy, chemicals and water.
Explanation:
mark as brainliest
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Health
Women make up half of the world. The choices we make as consumers carry an enormous impact. The more we educate ourselves and make those choices consciously — and the more vocal we are about the effects of our choices on a global scale— the more we can ignite positive change.
Zooming in On The Clothing Industry
A substantial portion of our consumer choices occur within the fashion industry. The womenswear industry alone is valued at $621 billion dollars, which is $219 billion more than menswear. Fashion is and has historically been a significant piece of our individual identities.
However, what many of us may not realize, is that each time we make a clothing purchase, we are potentially supporting practices with grave consequences for our environment and our health.
The Environment
For starters, the only industry causing more pollution than Big Textile is the oil industry. Fashion involves supply chains of production, raw material, textile manufacture, clothing construction, shipping, retail, use and disposal.
Taking a closer look at this sequence of events, we find somewhat obvious pollutants, such as the pesticides used in farming cotton, toxic dyes used in manufacturing, the amount of waste clothing produces, along with the harmful amount of natural resources used in extraction, farming, harvesting, processing, manufacturing, and shipping.
For example, the manufacture of synthetic fibers like polyester uses exorbitant amounts of energy and crude oil, which release harmful emissions like volatile organic compounds, particulate matter, and acid gases like hydrogen chloride. Polyester and nylon are both made from petrochemicals, meaning they are inherently unsustainable. Nylon manufacture emits large amounts of the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide. Just one pound of nitrous oxide has a 300x larger impact than carbon dioxide on global warming.
Equally alarming is the amount of waste generated by the fashion industry. In 2013 alone, 15.1 million tons of textile waste was generated.
Your Health
While few studies have been conducted to directly link chemicals in clothing to human health issues, the chemicals often found in garments (or used in their production) have been linked to neurotoxicity, liver, kidney and lung disorders, cancer and more. For example, clothes that are marketed as wrinkle-resistant are often made with formaldehyde and have been linked with eye and nose irritation, and allergic reactions on people’s skin.
There are thousands of potentially hazardous chemicals used when making clothes, including:
Dimethylformamide found in acrylic fabrics
Azo dyes used to color clothes
Phthalates found in plastic raincoats, fake leather and waterproof clothing
Nanosilver used in clothes marketed as antimicrobial
Again, chemicals in clothing have not yet been determined to cause human health concerns more serious than allergic reactions and irritations, but the fact of the matter is that there are safer alternatives, and using these chemicals isn’t necessary.
The Fast Fashion Problem
In the modern world, consumerism has become increasingly accessible and rampant. One dire example of this kind of wasteful consumerism is what’s known as fast fashion, a 10-year-old trend where clothing is essentially designed to be more disposable.
Accelerating Consequences
Americans dispose of more than 68 pounds of clothes per person annually, and fast fashion only ignites this harmful chain reaction of churn and burn, leading to an acceleration of the textile industry’s environmental consequences.
The EPA has declared a number of textile manufacturing facilities to be hazardous waste generators, and clothing and other textiles represent approximately 9% of municipal solid waste. The amount of discarded clothing tossed into landfills is projected to reach 35.4 billion pounds in 2019. The fashion industry’s CO2 emissions are also projected to increase by more than 60% to nearly 2.8 billion tons per year by 2030.
A Disaster For Women
Perhaps even more concerning than fast fashion’s carbon footprint is the poor labor practices it supports. To quote a jarring Forbes headline, “fast fashion is a disaster for women and the environment.”
80% of the 75 million people who make our clothes today are made up of women ages 18-24 years old, and it takes them 18 months “to earn what a fashion brand CEO makes on their lunch break.” Most make less than $3 a day.
Cheap clothes are made by underage workers entering the industry as young as 14 to work long hard hours (an avg. 14 hrs per day in sweatshops) for low wages, while dealing with sexual harassment.