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  2. Environmental impact of fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_impact_of...

    Globalization has encouraged the rapid growth of the fast fashion industry. Global retail sales of apparel in 2019 reached 1.9 trillion U.S dollars, a new high – this number is expected to double to three trillion U.S. dollars by the year 2030. The world consumes more than 80 billion items of clothing annually. [16]

  3. Plastic bans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plastic_bans

    Plastic bans are laws that prohibit the use of polymers manufactured from petroleum or other fossil fuels, given the pollution and threat to biodiversity that they cause.A growing number of countries have instituted plastic bag bans, and a ban on single-use plastic (such as throw-away forks or plates), and are looking to spread bans to all plastic packaging, plastic clothing (such as polyester ...

  4. Polyester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyester

    A polyester shirt Close-up of a polyester shirt SEM picture of a bend in a high-surface area polyester fiber with a seven-lobed cross section A drop of water on a water resistant polyester Polyesters can contain one ester linkage per repeat unit of the polymer, as in polyhydroxyalkanoates like polylactic acid , or they may have two ester ...

  5. Synthetic fiber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_fiber

    Although many classes of fibers based on synthetic polymers have been evaluated as potentially valuable commercial products, four of them - nylon, polyester, acrylic and polyolefin - dominate the market. These four account for approximately 98 percent by volume of synthetic fiber production, with polyester alone accounting for around 60 percent ...

  6. Sustainable fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainable_fashion

    The environmental impact of fashion also depends on how much and how long a garment is used. With the fast fashion trend, garments tend to be used half as much as compared to 15 years ago. It has been estimated that each year around $172 million worth of garments is expected to be discarded, many of them after being worn only once. [51]

  7. A History of Greenwashing: How Dirty Towels Impacted the ...

    www.aol.com/news/2011-02-12-the-history-of-green...

    At some point in the mid-1980s, a pony-tailed upstate New York environmental activist named Jay Westerveld picked up a card in a South Pacific hotel room and read the following: "Save Our Planet ...

  8. Ten ways the coronavirus pandemic has changed society for good

    www.aol.com/ten-ways-coronavirus-pandemic...

    It has changed the way you and I approach hand hygiene. “We all carry hand sanitiser around now. We all expect in most of the places we go into that hand sanitiser is provided at the door.”

  9. Textile industry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textile_industry

    Polyester became hugely popular in the apparel market, and by the late 1970s, more polyester was sold in the United States than cotton. [ 22 ] By the late 1980s, the apparel segment was no longer the largest market for fibre products, with industrial and home furnishings together representing a larger proportion of the fibre market. [ 23 ]