Textile Industry Hazards
Textile Industry Hazards
Textile Industry Hazards
The textile industry has been condemned as being one of the world’s worst offenders in
terms of pollution because it requires a great amount of two components:
• Chemicals: as many as 2,000 different chemicals are used in the textile industry,
from dyes to transfer agents; and
• Water: a finite resource that is quickly becoming scarce, and is used at every step
of the process both to convey the chemicals used during that step and to wash
them out before beginning the next step. The water becomes full of chemical
additives and is then expelled as wastewater; which in turn pollutes the
environment:
o by the effluent’s heat;
o by its increased pH;
o and because it’s saturated with dyes, de-foamers, bleaches, detergents, optical
brighteners, equalizers and many other chemicals used during the process.
Water Pollution:
Mills discharge millions of gallons of effluent each year, full of chemicals such as
formaldehyde (HCHO), chlorine, heavy metals (such as lead and mercury) and others,
which are significant causes of environmental degradation and human illnesses. The
mill effluent is also often of a high temperature and pH, both of which are extremely
damaging.
All of the mills O Ecotextiles uses have wastewater treatment in place. Every 25 meters
of an O Ecotextiles sofa fabric prevents 2,300 liters of chemically infused
effluent—about the size of a California hot tub and containing from 1 to 10 kg of toxic
chemicals—from entering the environment. (Based on VPI study for Dept. of
Environmental Quality for the state of Virginia.)
Fibers:
O Ecotextiles emphasizes the use of the "bast" fibers such as hemp, linen, and abaca. A
"bast" plant is one where the fiber that is spun into yarn comes from the stalk, and not
the flower of the plant. Bugs don't munch on stalks, so the plants can be grown without
pesticides. O Ecotextiles fibers include:
• Hemp and Flax (Linen) made from water-retted hemp, employing biological
processes to extract the fiber from the stalk. The colors of the fibers vary,
depending on the weather during cultivation and retting, yielding subtle, natural
variations.
• Bamboo used by O Ecotextiles does not impact Panda habitats. Almost all
bamboo fiber is made using the viscose process (non-viscose bamboo fiber is too
coarse for furnishings or apparel), which employs sulfuric acid (often improperly
handled because the processes are so laborious and expensive). O Ecotextiles is
proud to produce bamboo viscose with minimal deleterious environmental
effects. In its wastewater, sulfuric acid is sequestered completely and neutralized
using bacteria.
O Ecotextiles uses only fibers that have been grown without any toxic pesticides,
herbicides, or chemical fertilizers. The company supports maintenance of healthy soils,
which in turn helps minimize global warming.
Cotton is the second-most damaging agricultural crop in the world; 25 percent of all
pesticides used globally are put on cotton crops. Most cotton is irrigated, and the
combination of chemical application (through pesticides and fertilizers) with irrigation
is a direct conduit for toxic chemicals to circulate in groundwater worldwide. Although
O Ecotextiles uses organic cotton, we try to de-emphasize its use because organic cotton
is too thirsty a crop for most of the areas where it is grown. O Ecotextiles takes care to
assure that the organic cotton we use comes from fields that enjoy natural rainfall
sufficient to irrigate the crops. In this way, the desertification of vast areas of the globe -
as in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan around the Aral Sea - does not result in
environmental catastrophe.
Sizing:
At O Ecotextiles mills, no polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) is used; the company requires its
mills to use potato starch or carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) which is cellulose dissolved
by an acid to become a liquid. It is used in food and is chemically inert – and non-toxic –
and is allowed under Global Organic Textile Standard 2.3.5.
Bleaching:
Chlorine bleach is known to be extremely toxic to the environment and to consumers,
yet chlorine-based chemicals are still often used to bleach fabrics. In O Ecotextiles’
mills, the bleaching method must be oxygen-based (hydrogen peroxide) and the
wastewater is treated. In one mill, ozone, a very new technology, is used for bleaching.
This technology relies on cool water (rather than having to maintain the fabric in a hot
water bath for many hours) and the ozone breaks down into water and oxygen.
Dyeing:
Many textile manufacturers use dyes that release aromatic amines (e.g., benzidine,
toluidine). Dyebath effluents may contain heavy metals, ammonia, alkalai salts, toxic
solids and large amounts of pigments - many of which are toxic. About 40 percent of
globally used colorants contain organically bound chlorine, a known carcinogen.
Natural dyes are rarely low-impact, depending on the specific dye and mordant used.
Mordants (the substance used to "fix" the color onto the fabric) such as chromium are
very toxic and high impact. The large quantities of natural dyestuffs required for
dyeing, typically equal to or double that of the fiber’s own weight, make natural dyes
prepared from wild plants and lichens very high impact.
O Ecotextiles uses low-impact reactive dyes in a closed-loop system. While they are the
lowest-impact fiber reactive dyes available, the dyes are by no means low impact. At
best, about 80 percent of the dyestuffs stay on the fabric, while the rest go down the
drain (although the water is contained and treated before returning to the ecosystem).
O Ecotextiles dyes contain no heavy metals, so the dye house wastewater treatment
yields pristine water.
Finishing:
O Ecotextiles does not apply functional finishes (such as flame retardants) to its fabrics.
However, the company offers the application—after manufacture—of certain flame-
retardants that have no VOCs, PBDEs, deca-BFRs or other hazardous chemicals.
Rather than using harsh chemicals to soften and finish our fabrics, O Ecotextiles’ finish
is made of bees wax, aloe vera and Vitamin A.
Best Practices:
O Ecotextiles routinely reevaluates its environmental best practices and life cycle
assessment in light of new developments. The company encourages dialogue among
consumers about the implications of their textile choices, and is planning a textile blog
where shared information can help sort out the complex issues surrounding sustainable
textiles.
Sources: “Environmental Hazards of the Textile Industry,” Environmental Update #24, published by the Hazardous
Substance Research Centers/ South & Southwest Outreach Program, June 2006; Business Week, June 5, 2005.