Rate this post

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars

Join the discussion

3 comments

Share this article

Published on October 30th, 2009

Recycling Jeans a Hot Project for Businesses, Students

Approximately 23.8 billion pounds of clothing end up in U.S. landfills each year, according to Goodwill.

Levi Strauss & Co., Goodwill and students at the University of Memphis have taken on the charge of reducing that number with two separate projects.

A partnership between Levi Strauss & Co. and Goodwill is attempting to divert more clothing from landfills by promoting donation of unwanted clothing, as well as encouraging sustainable washing practices. The program, called “A Care Tag for Our Planet,” will replace the care tags on all Levi’s clothing beginning in January 2010 with tags that read, “Machine wash cold, line dry when possible and donate to Goodwill.”

Photo: Flickr/jmb1977

Levi Strauss & Co. has been dedicated to environmental issues for more than two decades. By studying the life cycle of one pair of Levi’s jeans they found that their biggest environmental impact was consumer care. Photo: Flickr/jmb1977

According to the TerraPass Footprint, between 85 and 90 percent of the energy used by a washing machine goes to power the water heater. A switch of all U.S. washers to cold water would mean a savings of about 30 million tons of CO2 per year.

“As a company built on values, we have long worked to promote sustainability in how we make our products and run our operations,” John Anderson, president and CEO of Levi Strauss & Co., told Ad Age. “This initiative uses our global voice to empower hundreds of millions of consumers around the world to join us by providing simple and actionable ways to help care for our planet,” he said.

But Goodwill and Levi Strauss & Co. are not the only ones taking action to keep clothing out of landfills. Students at the University of Memphis are partnering with Habitat for Humanity to collect old jeans to be used as insulation for homes. The project is called “Cotton: From Blue to Green.” A collection drive is aiming to recycle between 500 and 1,000 pairs of jeans. The used cotton will then be recycled into insulation for a new home.

Brad Robb, vice president of communications for the Cotton Board told My Eyewitness News.com that recycled cotton is environmentally friendly. “Not only is it just as good as regular insulation, you don’t have to use gloves. It’s not itchy, so that’s a plus,” he said.

Both of these projects are attempting to change the way Americans view clothing. Instead of being a disposable good, the programs prove that nearly all items can be reused or recycled and made into a usable, new product.

3 Comments

  1. Green Family Blog

    posted on November 3rd, 2009 at 8:12 pm

    Thanks for the article, we’ve been using cold wash cycles for years now and always use the special cold wash detergents, they work great…

    Also, check out our article which takes you inside a Texas recycling center;
    http://www.oureverydayearth.com/2009/11/02/inside-the-recycling-process-with-ecorewards/

  2. Recycle Your Jeans | Village of Taxco

    posted on November 5th, 2009 at 10:46 am

    [...] more about recycling your jeans here Are you going to recycle any of your [...]

  3. Green Jeans | Village Green Apartments

    posted on November 21st, 2009 at 6:15 pm

    [...] More Here http://earth911.com [...]

Join the discussion



Recently Added to Clothing

  • Eco Fashion Huge in NYC, Grammys...and the UN?

    Fashion has taken a serious nosedive to rock-bottom with PR messes in the past couple weeks with H&M’s trashed clothing scandal and India’s organic cotton fiasco. So with New York Fashion Week just two weeks out, eco-fashion can only go up, …

  • Major Clothing Retailer Accused of Trashing Apparel

    Clothing retailer H&M has been accused of tossing out its damaged and unsold clothes instead of repairing or donating them.

    First reported by The New York Times on Wednesday, graduate student Cynthia Magnus tells the paper that she often sees piles …

  • Patagonia Tells the True Story of Your Clothing

    When you buy a new fleece jacket or a pair of leather ballerina flats, do you ever think of how that product came into fruition? After the initial idea, what was the next step, and how did it eventually end …