Do you know where the clothes
in your wardrobe come from,
not just if they are from the high street
or if your cupboards are packed
with designer labels,
but what they're made of?
Do they come from materials
that are harming the planet?
Are our clothes just a mirror reflection
of what is happening to our environment?
Hi, I'm Michelle Yeoh.
I like to look good,
not only for the red carpet
but in everyday life.
The connection between our clothes
and their impact on the environment
doesn't immediately come to mind.
If a jacket, a skirt or a dress looks good
and if we can afford it, we buy it.
But the environment pays the price.
I'm going to find out
what sustainable fashion could look like
without compromising
the beauty of our clothes.
The United Nations promotes
a better future for people and the planet
through a global effort known as
"The Sustainable Development Goals".
So I've come to the UN's office in Geneva,
to learn more about what some are calling
"an environmental emergency
in the garment industry".
The environmental impact
of the fashion industry's actually immense
and a large part of that
is the production of textiles.
Manufacturing of clothes
is very water intensive
and releases high levels
of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
The fashion industry generates
around 10% of global carbon emissions.
That's more than all international flights
and maritime shipping combined.
It is also one of the world's
biggest users of water
and produces around 20%
of global wastewater.
It takes up to 10 thousand liters of water
to produce just 1 kilo of cotton.
Enough to make
a single pair of denim jeans.
That's as much water
as a human being drinks
over the course of 10 years.
When we wash synthetic fibers,
the other most commonly used materials,
they release microplastics into our rivers
which end up polluting the oceans.
With clothing more affordable
and more availabe than ever before,
is it time to move on
from throwaway fashion?
Today with fast and cheap production,
85% of textiles end up in landfills
or are incinerated.
So, what's the alternative?
Forests can provide part of the solution.
Using the latest technology to produce
wood based fibers for our clothes.
Of course this has to go hand in hand
with sustainable forest management.
If we are to use forests' products,
we need to make sure
the forests remain healthy
and continue to grow.
So fashion out of forests
is possible and sustainable.
Let's see how it looks like.
We are traveling to Biella in Italy.
So I can see for myself if clothing
that has little impact on the environment
can look as good or even better
than the ones we are all used to.
We have 4 young italian designers.
All of them, wathever they do
is with sustainable fabrics.
I'm choosing a design for a dress
and a jacket to make
from natural wood based fibers.
My dress and jacket will be made
to order here in Cittadellarte,
a place where artists come together
to explore connections
between their work
and broader social issues.
Welcome to Cittadellarte!
Its founder is the world renowned artist
Michelangelo Pistoletto.
Fashion is very important because
it brings the aesthetic into the society.
But for me, it's not enough.
We have also to bring the ethic.
Designer Tiziano Guardini
represents precisely
this greater awereness of ethics
and production
a young generation of creative artists
bring to the fashion industry.
I've picked his design.
I love the simplicity but at the same time
when you go in you see the details.
But explain to me the whole process.
I use only eco sustainable materials
because, for me, it's important
to think about our future.
In the second step I search fabrics
that can explain my idea.
Tiziano works with wood based fibers
that use on average 60x
less water compared to cotton
and produces 50x fewer carbon emissions
than synthetic fibers.
Wood chips from certified
susteinable forests
are processed into pulp.
Reduced to a viscous solution
that produces fibers.
And ultimately,
these are turned into threads,
with create soft and silky materials
with a light footprint on the environment.
Smart fashion from sustainable sources
is already widely available.
And not only from high end designers.
It is also affordable.
As we insist for our clothes
to be produced sustainably,
more and more brands
are quickly joining this new trend.
I'm in Paris,
one of the fashion capitals of the world,
where I will be wearing my new outfit
for the first time.
Wearing this dress is a privilege,
I realized.
I would have never thought
that it came from the forest.
A beautiful outfit is even more satisfing
knowing that it's been made
from natural materials.
Materials that are not harming the planet.
From the forest to the city.
I made my choice.
What choice are you making?