Textile recycling could cut CO₂ by 440,000 tonnes a year: Research

0
381

Insights

  • A 10 per cent textile-to-textile recycling rate by 2035 could cut CO₂ emissions by 440,000 tonnes annually and ease water scarcity by over 3 per cent, said IVL.
  • With current rates at just 1 per cent, advanced recycling could boost it to 26 per cent by 2030.
  • The study has urged EU policy support to improve fibre recycling efficiency and infrastructure.

Reaching a modest 10 per cent textile-to-textile recycling rate by 2035 could cut CO2 emissions by 440,000 tonnes annually and reduce water scarcity impacts by over 3 per cent—or 8.8 billion m³ world equivalent, according to findings from the IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute.

Despite rising concerns over fast fashion’s sustainability, global textile-to-textile recycling remains critically low—at only around 1 per cent. However, advanced recycling technologies could lift that rate to 26 per cent by 2030.

The research, which examined five key recycling processes and used Monte Carlo modelling, showed a 92 per cent probability of reducing climate impacts and a nearly 100 per cent chance of bringing water scarcity improvements. The average reduction in climate impact of the new approach, compared to ‘business as usual’, was 0.5 per cent.

With the EU aiming to make all textiles placed on the market durable, repairable, and recyclable by 2030 under its Sustainable and Circular Textiles Strategy, the study underscores the need for policy support to scale fibre-to-fibre recycling. This includes improvements in textile collection and sorting, quality of recycled fibres, and mechanisms such as taxes on virgin materials to shift industry norms.

Researchers emphasise that while recycling must increase, the processes themselves also require enhanced efficiency to ensure that recycled fibres can effectively replace virgin counterparts. The findings add weight to calls for coordinated EU action under frameworks like the Energy Efficiency Directive and Circular Economy Action Plan.

Pesquisar
Categorias
Leia Mais
Fashion Media & Publications
LPG Shortage Threatens Shutdown of Sanganer’s Textile Printing Industry
The textile dyeing and printing industry in Sanganer, is facing the prospect of a production...
Por Apparel Resources 2026-03-23 12:06:52 0 275
Fashion Media & Publications
Syre And JEPLAN Announce Strategic Partnership To Accelerate Textile-To-Textile Recycling
Japanese pioneer developing and operating chemical recycling technologies for circularity in...
Por Textile World 2026-04-11 03:26:53 0 479
Fashion Media & Publications
New era of textile superpowers: energy efficiency and sustainability
For decades, the global textile industry ran on a single competitive principle: lower labor costs...
Por TexSPACEToday 2026-04-27 06:36:04 0 326
Fashion Media & Publications
Itema To Showcase Weaving Excellence At ITM 2026
COLZATE, Italy and ISTANBUL, Türkiye  — May 21, 2026 — From June 9 to 13,...
Por Textile World 2026-05-25 06:40:50 0 42
Fashion Media & Publications
Reimagining Denim - Responsibly
Anant Ahuja says, enabling low-impact technologies through policy, brands making long-term...
Por The Indian Textile Journal 2026-03-28 05:25:34 0 234