YouTube Transcript:
The true cost of fast fashion
Skip watching entire videos - get the full transcript, search for keywords, and copy with one click.
Share:
Video Transcript
View:
Buying clothes has never been easier.
80 billion items are manufactured every year.
We're putting too much product out there,
most of that product ending up in landfill.
So-called 'fast fashion' allows consumers
to buy more, but they're wearing these garments less often
and disposing of them at an unprecedented rate.
This is where wardrobe castoffs end up.
Savanna Rags is a clothes recycling
and processing plant in Nottingham, England.
They process discarded clothes from recycling bins
around the country.
Mohammed Patel has been running this plant for 12 years.
Majority of it will go to Africa and Dubai.
We send some of it to Europe and we have a couple
of buyers here in the UK that buy from us also.
Globally, sorting plants like this only deal with
around 25% of discarded clothes.
In Britain, more than 300,000 tonnes of clothes
end up in landfill every year.
It's the fastest growing category of waste in the country.
But this is a global problem.
Expanding middle classes in emerging markets are hungry
for more and cheaper fashion.
It's estimated that by 2050, global clothing sales
could more than triple.
One of the things that we've noticed is that the quality
of the actual material being used has gone down.
We're now having to process a lot more just to get the
same quality of goods that we can sell on.
But how can the fashion industry continue to grow
while addressing the environmental need for people
to buy fewer clothes?
New York fashionista Ijeoma Kola is less about rags
and more about the latest runway fashions.
Because I post often on Instagram,
there is a little bit of pressure to have a new outfit.
She's a fashion blogger.
Her stylish posts and clothing tips are attracting
a big online following.
I found myself before buying a lot of clothes.
I usually bought clothes from H&M and Zara, or ASOS.
But if you're looking for trendy pieces they have them,
they're pretty affordable.
Today she's looking for a new outfit for a swanky
industry event.
But this store doesn't sell clothes, it rents them.
Ijeoma has been championing Rent the Runway's radical
new approach to high end fashion.
Rent the Runway is a clothing borrowing service
which allows you to rent clothes for either 4 or 8 days
at a time.
You are cycling through clothing as fast
but you're borrowing it with other people
so other people get to wear the same thing
that you're wearing as well.
On average only 20% of clothes are worn
on a regular basis.
Rent the Runway's mission is to change consumers
relationship with the clothes they wear.
Rather than buying something only getting to wear it
maybe three or four times
before you decide to give it away or throw it away
an item is worn a lot more when it is being shared
across different people.
Rent the Runway only has a couple of flagship stores
but online it's a giant and it's disrupting
the fashion industry.
To date, there are 10 million members so it comes with
a hefty laundry bill.
The company claims to have the largest dry cleaning facility
in the world.
Rent the Runway is getting more mileage out of
items of clothing, it's also helping to tackle
an increasing throwaway culture.
But the last thing clothing brands want
is for consumers to buy less.
Except perhaps, for Patagonia, an outdoor apparel brand
which sent shock waves through the industry with this
full page advert in the New York Times
on Black Friday 2011.
Here in Amsterdam, Ryan Gellert heads up Patagonia's
operations in Europe and the Middle East.
The apparel industry has become
one of the most polluting in the world
as an industry we're creating product that people don't need
by stimulating demand and creating this sense
that if you don't buy it now it's not going to be available.
There's this race to the bottom on price and quality
that is an unsustainable model.
Patagonia's philosophy flies in the face of fast fashion
to buy once, buy well, and mend clothing
for a longer lifespan.
So maybe doing that in Amsterdam and then figuring out
how to share it elsewhere.
With the largest single repair facility in North America,
and mobile mending services around Europe and America,
Patagonia's anti-fashion environmental message
has resonated with people who buy into their vision.
Helping our customers keep their product in use longer
was also one of the original big ideas in Patagonia.
Between 2008 and 2014, profits reportedly tripled.
Patagonia claims it generates revenue of nearly
1 billion dollars a year.
It's hope is to inspire other brands to tackle the
environmental impact of fast fashion.
If I had the opportunity to sit down with
leaders from some of the bigger fast fashion companies
in the world, what I'd really encourage them to understand
the full impact of their supply chains.
Patagonia provides a glimpse into a more enlightened
approach to fashion.
But they're a rare example.
For Mohammed, the boom in fast fashion has been good
for business, but this throw away culture
sits uncomfortably with him.
Sometimes it's soul destroying, because you come to work
and you just think, is this what we've come to
that the human race all we think about is dispose of things.
The environmental impact on the planet is just colossal
and I don't think we as the human race realize
what it is that we're doing, just for the sake of wearing
a pair of jeans.
In order to tackle the throwaway culture,
brands and consumers need to change their behaviors.
Industry pioneers are proving that there are viable
business opportunities in selling less,
others need to follow suit.
Click on any text or timestamp to jump to that moment in the video
Share:
Most transcripts ready in under 5 seconds
One-Click Copy125+ LanguagesSearch ContentJump to Timestamps
Paste YouTube URL
Enter any YouTube video link to get the full transcript
Transcript Extraction Form
Most transcripts ready in under 5 seconds
Get Our Chrome Extension
Get transcripts instantly without leaving YouTube. Install our Chrome extension for one-click access to any video's transcript directly on the watch page.
Works with YouTube, Coursera, Udemy and more educational platforms
Get Instant Transcripts: Just Edit the Domain in Your Address Bar!
YouTube
←
→
↻
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UF8uR6Z6KLc
YoutubeToText
←
→
↻
https://youtubetotext.net/watch?v=UF8uR6Z6KLc