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Recycling fashion: The town turning waste into clothes - BBC News

  • 0:00 - 0:04
    Sophia Bettiza: Most of our clothes
    will never get recycled.
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    99% will end up here,
    dumped and burned in landfill.
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    MW: Our Earth at this point is not capable
    of absorbing the huge amount of clothing
  • 0:14 - 0:16
    that is produced each year.
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    SB: But what if all those wasted clothes
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    could be saved and turned
    into something else?
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    I've come to a town in Italy called Prato.
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    This place has mastered a method
    to transform old scraps into new clothes.
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    FT: This makes us feel proud.
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    SB: What happens here is unique.
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    There are hundreds of companies
    in this small district
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    and each specializes
    in one specific aspect of the process,
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    whether it's spinning,
    weaving or designing.
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    And today, incredibly,
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    this town says it processes 15%
    of all recycled clothes in the world.
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    So this is your shirt.
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    If it's too old for the charity shop,
    it gets sent for recycling.
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    Here, it's sorted by colour,
    torn apart, washed,
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    and then the new recycled material
    is taken and transformed
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    to make new clothes with minimum waste.
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    That was very quick.
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    Let's go through the process again.
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    You donate clothes.
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    They arrive here
    from lots of different countries.
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    All the garments
    that can be sold second-hand
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    are taken to this company nearby.
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    Here, not only are they
    separated by colour,
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    but also by material.
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    Think these used to be trousers!
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    How many clothes do you recycle here?
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    FT: About 25 tonnes every day.
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    SB: The clothes are put in this.
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    It's called a carbonizing machine -
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    it eliminates impurities from the wool.
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    Then, they go through this.
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    It's like a giant washing machine.
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    They're shredded, cleaned and dried.
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    This is the final result -
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    your old clothes have been transformed
    into these fine, fluffy wool fibres.
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    So at the end of the process,
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    this is what the new recycled
    materials look like.
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    They're placed here
    until a fashion brand buys them
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    and uses them to make clothes.
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    Some people might say
    that you are using trash to make clothes.
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    FB(Owner): This might have been
    the case a few years ago.
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    The word "rubbish" was an insult.
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    But now, many brands...
    they buy my products because of it -
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    because they know that reusing resources
    is going to save the planet.
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    SB: Recycling wool is great
    for the environment.
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    Co2 emissions are more than halved
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    compared to when clothes
    are made from new material.
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    MW(FashionRevolution): We have
    an immediate impact on animal welfare,
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    because you reduce the stress
    that you have to put on the animals
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    to get the wool,
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    almost complete elimination of dyes
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    because the way the wool is recycled
    is an assortment by colour.
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    SB: This is a method that's been
    passed on from father to son.
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    MW: The culture in Prato
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    is the kind of culture that we need
    across the entire fashion industry
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    because it is based
    on collaboration that are local,
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    but are capable of showing how,
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    if these things are taken
    into a national or global scale,
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    the entire industry could benefit.
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    SB: The people of this town
    were forced to recycle clothes
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    because they couldn't afford the new ones.
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    Now their methods, which have been
    honed over the past hundred years,
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    could offer a way forward
    for a more sustainable fashion world.
  • 3:48 - 3:51
    Subtitles by Livia Cefaloni
    Review by Carol Wang
Title:
Recycling fashion: The town turning waste into clothes - BBC News
Description:

Fashion is one of the most polluting industries in the world. But a small town in Italy called Prato has built its fortune on transforming old scraps into new clothes, particularly knitwear and wool.

Could Prato represent a model for sustainable fashion?

Reporter: Sofia Bettiza

Editor: Sofia Bettiza

Filmed by: Paolo Patruno

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Amplifying Voices
Project:
Environment and Climate Change
Duration:
03:53

English subtitles

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