-
This is "Marketplace."
-
Whoa.
-
Pajamas, old dresses.
-
Oh, my gosh!
-
Where do all your old clothes
really end up?
-
Ultimately, it is going
to end up in a landfill.
-
We follow the trail around the world.
-
The high cost of fast fashion.
-
This is your "Marketplace."
-
I'm here checking out some of
the biggest fashion chains in the world,
-
but I'm not shopping for new clothes.
-
I'm actually trying to get rid of
some of my old ones.
-
So these are my all-time favorite
sweatpants from college.
-
These, I washed them
and they totally shrunk.
-
These were also super cheap.
-
This is just like an old T-shirt.
-
It was black at one point in its life.
-
Some retailers are on a mission.
-
They want your unwanted clothes,
-
and some are competing
with charities for it.
-
There's a new bin in town and
the message is clear:
-
Don't throw old clothes in the garbage,
-
dump them here.
-
They'll take curtains, they'll take jeans.
-
They'll even take your old underwear.
-
Drop off old clothes and get a coupon
-
to save money when you buy new ones.
-
But before I part with my old clothes,
-
I've got a few more questions.
-
These bins sure make us all feel good.
-
But are they doing as much good
as we think?
-
Look at this!
-
Look at these bags!
-
Most of us are like
the Bretons and the Palmas
-
in Markham, Ontario.
-
Somehow, we end up with too many clothes.
-
Emily, what's in here?
-
Old clothes that are too small for me.
-
They purge a few times a year,
-
normally dropping their
haul in a charity bin.
-
Whoa!
-
Stuff like these have holes in them.
-
This isn't just a pile of clothes.
-
It's now a pile of textile waste.
-
And we want to show the kids
just how big the problem really is.
-
Are you guys ready to go inside
-
and see what happens to all
those clothes that you donate?
-
Yes
-
All right. Let's go inside.
-
Go on in, take a look.
-
Whoa!
-
Clothes!
Clothes!
-
That's clothes.
-
Clothes.
Do you see that?
-
Oh, my gosh.
-
Clothes!
-
That's a crazy pile.
-
Charlsie: And get this,
all of this is what's leftover,
-
the stuff no one wants.
-
The stuff that
thrift stores can't sell.
-
All those clothes you
guys piled up yesterday,
-
this is where it can end up.
-
It's a lot of clothes.
-
It wasn't what I
was expecting to see.
-
Charlsie: One warehouse,
more than 200,000 pounds
-
of textile waste each week.
-
And that's just from
in and around Toronto.
-
Across the country, we've got
nine other locations
-
similar to this one.
-
The last year or two years,
probably a 15 to 20% growth in
-
the overall volume of
textiles that are coming in.
-
Charlsie: Tonny Colyn is the
head of donations for
-
Salvation Army Canada.
-
So, how do you think fast
fashion has impacted...this?
-
All of this.
-
It's had a massive effect.
-
And all of that stuff
has to go somewhere.
-
Charlsie: The dads
of these two families,
-
Michael Palma and Norman
Breton can't believe it.
-
Their coats or
boots might be okay,
-
but they want something new.
-
If they need or if they
want, it's a big question.
-
A lot of times they want
stuff but they don't need it.
-
Charlsie: Still, we can't
seem to get our hands
-
on fast fashion fast enough.
-
Cheap, trendy,
disposable clothes.
-
And we're even
bragging about it.
-
And I ended up with
a bag full of clothes.
-
Charlsie: We're all
buying too much,
-
400% more, since the 1980's.
-
The quality isn't all
that great but the
-
prices are fantastic.
-
Charlsie: But not all of
our old clothes make it
-
to the donation bin.
-
Most of it, 85%,
ends up in landfills.
-
In North America,
it's estimated to be at least
-
25 billion pounds a year.
-
In Canada alone, imagine a
mountain three times the size of
-
Toronto's Rogers Centre Stadium
where they don't biodegrade
-
easily because many are made
with fabrics that can't
-
be broken down.
-
Releasing chemicals and dyes
into our rivers, soil.
-
That's part of the reason why
fashion is one of the
-
world's top polluters.
-
So in the last few years, some
of the biggest names in the
-
business, Levi's, Nike,
Adidas, Zara
-
have started
recycling programs.
-
All retailers with donation bins
in stores calling out
-
for your old garments.
-
But none go as far as H&M,
they will take anything,
-
jeans, curtains, even underwear,
just check out their ads.
-
The thing that you never
wore, this and this and that.
-
The thing with the colour that
wasn't your colour,
-
bring it on.
-
Charlsie: This is one of
H&M's latest ad campaigns.
-
Cut your jeans into pieces
and make new jeans out of them.
-
Charlsie: "Cut your jeans
into pieces
-
"and make new
jeans out of them."
-
With your help, we literally
turn your old clothes
-
into new garments.
-
Charlsie: "We literally turn
your old clothes
-
"into new garments."
-
Garments in the worst
condition can be transformed
-
into insulation material or
textile fibers woven into cloth,
-
reborn as fashionable
new clothes
-
of every conceivable kind.
-
Charlsie: What do you
think about recycling clothes?
-
I think that's amazing.
-
That's a great plan.
-
Charlsie: We're talking
about recycling clothes.
-
What does that make you
think is happening to the stuff?
-
I think maybe it's, like,
like, refurbish the clothes
-
and, like, get them
to look new again.
-
Charlsie: What do you
think happens to that stuff?
-
Doesn't it get recycled to
make new clothes
-
from the old clothes?
-
Let's shred it into fibers
and stitch it
-
into something new.
-
The only thing we
will not do it waste it.
-
Charlsie: Bold
recycling claims.
-
They sound great,
but are they really?
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
[ Flight Attendant
Over Intercom ]
-
To try to find out,
we head to New York City,
-
one of the fashion
capitals of the world.
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
With jackets, you always
have to check the lining.
-
Charlsie: Meet
Elizabeth Cline,
-
an anti-fast fashion crusader.
-
Because of what she knows,
she only wears used clothes.
-
It's made her a pro at
assessing cast-offs.
-
On a coat, the first thing
you would do is
-
make sure the zippers work.
-
Especially fast fashion, like a
lot of the fasteners will break
-
and chip really quickly.
-
Charlsie: We show her H&M's
marketing and ask her what she
-
thinks about making new
clothes out of your old ones.
-
Shred it into fibers and
stitch it into something new.
-
The reality is that currently
only about 1% of clothing is
-
actually recycled and the
very literal sense of the word.
-
Charlsie: 1%?
-
1%.
-
Charlsie: 1%...is recycled?
-
If you're talking about
recycling in terms of taking
-
fibers and breaking them down
and turning them
-
back into new fibers, it's 1%.
-
Charlsie: Why is it so hard
to just take my old shirt and
-
turn it into a new one, why
can't you just do is that?
-
A lot of our clothes are made
out of blended fibers, so maybe
-
this is acrylic and wool
and cotton mixed together,
-
maybe my tights are
cotton and elastin,
-
that makes it
difficult to recycle.
-
The other challenge is that when
you recycle cotton and wool,
-
it diminishes the quality of
that material so it weakens the
-
cotton and wool strand and
gives you a lesser product.
-
Charlsie: Bottom line, the
technology just isn't there yet.
-
It's way too expensive and
too time consuming
-
to make new clothes
from old ones.
-
It's also a more skeptical
side of me that knows that the
-
reason why H&M is focusing on
textile recycling is because
-
it's an easy
sustainability win for them.
-
It doesn't involve them changing
their production model at all to
-
collect clothes and make sure
that they get a second life.
-
It doesn't make the fast fashion
system anymore sustainable.
-
Charlsie: Experts agree fast
fashion needs to change if we
-
really want to
make a difference.
-
Remember when fashion
had four seasons,
-
winter, spring,
summer and fall?
-
Now the trends
change almost every day.
-
Here's how this Swedish
clothing giant CEO explains it.
-
They have new garments coming
into the stores almost every day
-
so if you go to an H&M store
today and come back two days
-
later, you will always
find something new.
-
Charlsie: H&M salespeople
tell us new clothes come in
-
every Monday, Wednesday,
Friday, and Sunday.
-
That works out to half a
billion products a year.
-
And it's why H&M's recycling
campaign makes
-
Claudia Marsales so mad.
-
It really is a
form of greenwashing.
-
Charlsie: She's the head
of Markham, Ontario's
-
waste programs,
one of the few Canadian cities
-
to actually ban
textiles from landfills.
-
In order for the fast fashion
outlets to recycle what they
-
make, it would take
12 years to recycle
-
what they sell in 48 hours.
-
Like it's just-- it's just--
so that sort of tells me it's
-
really more about
foot traffic, marketing,
-
greenwashing than about really
addressing the broken business
-
model of fast fashion.
-
>> Charlsie: We asked H&M to
come on camera and talk about
-
their recycling program.
-
They declined, assuring us
they don't want to
-
encourage a throw-away attitude.
-
Their clothes are good
quality and made to last.
-
And they are working
towards a business model where,
-
eventually, all their
clothes can be recycled.
-
>> At least they're trying?
-
>> Yes, well, but they're a
cause of the problem so fast
-
fashion retailers, their
business model is the problem.
-
They're making too much,
they're selling it too cheap,
-
it's disposable clothing.
-
Doing a bit of back-end
recycling and a bit of
-
commercials really
doesn't address that issue.
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
>> Charlsie: And ask some
customers one of the things they
-
love most about the program?
-
It's the discount.
-
That incentive to keep buying.
-
>> I put it in the bin and
then they give me a discount,
-
I saw it and it's like oh, snap.
-
You know, um,
it's a way to, like,
-
you know, like, help me and
help them at the same time.
-
>> Charlsie: What do you mean
when you say help you and help
-
someone else?
-
>> Um, help me by, you know,
saving money and help them by
-
providing free
clothing for them.
-
>> We just chuck it in
the bin and they did offer,
-
like, a $5 discount.
-
>> Charlsie: H&M might be
collecting your old clothes.
-
More than 55,000 tonnes so far,
but if they're barely making new
-
clothes from your
donations, where do they all go?
-
These shoppers have a theory.
-
Where do you think those
clothes go that you put in H&M?
-
>> They probably go to,
like, people who need them,
-
probably like shelters or other
places that use the clothes.
-
>> Probably give it for free,
or something,
-
to, like, the
people that need it.
-
>> Charlsie: Where do
you think that stuff goes,
-
what do you think happens to it?
-
>> Hopefully to just
some needy people.
-
>> Yeah.
>> Mmm-hmm.
-
>> Who still want
to be fashionable.
-
>> Charlsie: Many of us think
our old clothes are given to the
-
less fortunate.
-
Wrong.
-
And maybe you're telling
yourself that to feel better
-
about buying more, too.
-
Well, Cline coined
a term for this.
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
>> Charlsie: What's the
clothing deficit myth?
-
>> So, the clothing deficit myth
is the idea that when we give
-
clothes to charity, they're
going to go to someone locally
-
in our community in need.
-
But in the era of fast fashion,
there's far more unwanted
-
clothes than there
are people in need.
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
>> Charlsie: The Salvation Army
knows all about that.
-
Remember, this is all the stuff
they can't sell at their stores.
-
So what do they do
with all these leftovers?
-
They sell it-- to a middle man.
-
And the retailers do the
same thing with all
-
your donations, too.
-
In Canada, H&M gives the money
it makes off your donations
-
to UNICEF.
-
Here's the thing.
-
All textiles are worth money.
-
The stuff that's in really rough
shape is shredded for painter's
-
cloths or insulation, for
example, then sold.
-
But the majority of all donated
clothes are shipped overseas to
-
developing countries
and they're sold there, too.
-
Not donated or
given to needy people.
-
And if you think that means
it's not going to end up in
-
landfills, think again.
-
We follow the trail of
your old tee-shirts.
-
Around the world.
-
>> The black stripes
here are from Canada.
-
>> Charlsie: You can't
afford to miss this trip.
-
This is your "Marketplace."
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
>> Charlsie: The real
deal on your "Marketplace."
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
>> Charlsie: We love
our clothes.
-
Now so cheap, you can make a
different statement every day.
-
These things are $3?
-
$5.
-
But they come with a huge cost.
-
Part of the reason why
some fast fashion chains,
-
like H&M, say they've got
recycling programs like this.
-
>> The Earth simply cannot bear
so many clothes ending their
-
lives as waste.
-
H&M has a far better answer.
-
>> Charlsie: But we learnt less
than 1% of the world's
-
used clothes are turned
into new ones.
-
The majority of those donations
from retailer and charity bins
-
are baled and sold overseas.
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
>> This is Nairobi, Kenya, the
country at the top of the list
-
when it comes to
buying your old clothes.
-
Kenya is one of
Canada's best customers.
-
In a given year, they buy more
than $20 million worth of our
-
old clothes.
-
>> All the rest with
the black stripes,
-
the black stripes
here are from Canada.
-
These are a variety
of kids clothing.
-
This one is a jacket.
-
Ladies tee-shirts.
-
>> Charlsie: Maina Andrew
is a used clothing importer.
-
>> People from
Canada and America,
-
they are actually a bit huge.
-
>> Charlsie: Scenes
like this aren't isolated.
-
You'll see them all over Africa,
South and Central America.
-
A lot of this is stuff
Canadians donated for free,
-
only for it to be sold here
for profit to vendors like
-
Alice Nyansarora Anunda, who
brings it to her local market.
-
They call the clothes,
"Mitumba."
-
>> No, that one, it's
just a nickname we gave it,
-
"Mitumba" means, "Old"
in our culture.
-
>> Charlsie: Nearly
13,000 kilometres away.
-
But take a closer
look and there they are.
-
The names you know.
-
AEO, Zara, Adidas, H&M.
-
>> The way we open bales, we
know plans where there's new
-
clothes, especially
those which come from Canada.
-
>> Charlsie: But Andrew notices
many of the clothes are low
-
quality, tough to sell.
-
>> We just dump them.
-
If people don't buy
them, we just dump them.
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
>> They do go in
the piles of garbage,
-
very many of them.
-
>> Charlsie: He says this
happens regularly right behind
-
the market, discarding and
burning clothes Canadians don't
-
want and neither do Kenyans.
-
>> Sometimes they pack
even very old items.
-
You can even pack items
that are not even good,
-
and they end up dumping
them in Africa or in Kenya.
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
>> Yeah, we burn them and it is
a lost work because we have
-
already bought them.
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
>> Charlsie: All those popular
brands in the crowded markets,
-
Elizabeth Cline
has seen them, too.
-
She's been to Kenya.
-
>> There are a lot of different
companies around the world that
-
are working on textile recycling
in the truest sense of the word,
-
but it's really in
the very early stages.
-
Whether it stays in the United
States or if it ends up in
-
Africa, ultimately it is
going to end up in the landfill.
-
>> Charlsie: We tell H&M
about this Kenyan market
-
and all the fires.
-
They say its middle man
I:CO, which handles pickup and
-
distribution of their bins,
has really high standards.
-
But they are still working
on building a better tracking
-
system so this
doesn't keep happening.
-
>> Dumping is always cheaper.
-
It's always the cheaper option.
-
There's only one solution.
-
The producer of the clothing
is responsible cradle to grave.
-
So they make the tee-shirt,
they sell the tee-shirt,
-
the tee-shirt comes back, they
have to recycle that tee-shirt.
-
They can't put it in a
third world country.
-
>> As far as South
Africa is concerned,
-
we banned secondhand clothing.
-
>> When a country
survives on secondhand things,
-
secondhand clothes, it means
there's something wrong with
-
that system.
-
>> Threatening the survival of
the local textiles industry.
-
>> Charlsie: And now many
of those countries
-
are fighting back.
-
East African countries sent
the world a message recently.
-
They don't want our
hand-me-downs and
-
tried to ban them.
-
Their government said
it was destroying
-
their own textile market.
-
>> Secondhand clothes are
quite cheap and any manufactured
-
textile would not be
able to compete with them.
-
>> Charlsie: And despite
everything you just watched,
-
Cline says H&M group is a
frontrunner in
-
sustainability efforts.
-
Compared to other
brands, they are leaders.
-
I don't know what that says
about the rest of the fashion
-
industry, that a fast
fashion chain is
-
at the top of that list.
-
Just know that your textile
waste is an environmental issue.
-
Textile waste in landfills
is one of the fastest growing
-
categories of waste, and
it's such an easy thing to do
-
something about.
-
>> Charlsie: So what should you
do with all your old clothes?
-
The answers, coming right up.
-
Do you have a story you
want us to investigate?
-
Write to us, Marketplace@cbc.ca.
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
>> The high cost of
fashion on your "Marketplace."
-
Do you ever impulse buy?
-
>> Absolutely.
-
>> Charlsie: What was the last
thing you bought that now you
-
see, and you're like,
"What was I thinking?"
-
>> Clothing always.
-
>> Charlsie: On average, we buy
almost 70 clothing items
-
every year.
-
That means we're buying
new clothes every week.
-
What did you buy?
-
>> A lot of stuff.
-
>> Charlsie: Did
you need anything?
-
>> No.
-
>> Charlsie: Just looking around
and you bought a few things.
-
>> Yes, I bought lots of things.
-
Leggings, shirts,
socks, underwear.
-
>> Charlsie: Most of these
styles will end up trashed
-
in landfill.
-
Fast fashion is a big
part of the problem,
-
but we don't have to buy in.
-
So this is 50%
polyester, 50% cotton.
-
It's really hard to separate
those fibers and make new stuff.
-
>> You bet.
-
>> Charlsie: Do you know how
many litres of water goes into
-
making a single pair of jeans?
-
Almost 4,000 litres.
-
>> Wow.
>> Whoo.
-
>> That's crazy.
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
>> Charlsie: And sometimes
just seeing the waste
-
makes a difference.
-
These families swear
they'll change their ways.
-
>> They want to look
at the cute things,
-
things that look good but
not necessarily good quality.
-
>> We have to-- we try to teach
them to use their stuff until
-
it's worn out.
-
>> Charlsie: Speaking of
waste and consumption,
-
I've still got my bag of
clothes to get rid of.
-
I don't really know where
the best place is to go
-
with my stuff.
-
And I think people at home who
see this are probably going to
-
have the same question.
-
>> Some people like
to swap the clothes,
-
so that's the
first line of defence.
-
If it's in really
good condition,
-
you can take them to
a consignment store.
-
You can also donate to
a reputable charity.
-
Do your research on who
you're giving your clothing to.
-
Don't buy so much.
-
>> Charlsie: So bottom line,
when it comes to your used
-
clothing, don't throw it away,
try and give it to somebody who
-
can actually use it.
-
Hey, girls, does
anybody need a tee-shirt?
-
No, you sure?
-
Black dress pants?
-
Hardly ever wore them.
-
This is cool, right?
-
Zipper in the back.
-
>> I think I'm okay.
-
>> Charlsie: Any chance you
want to return yours and
-
take these ones.
-
>> No, thank you.
-
>> Charlsie: They're a
size small.
-
I wore them, like, twice.
-
>> No, thank you.
-
>> Charlsie: No?
>> No.
-
>> Charlsie: Do any of you need
a pair of pajama pants or know
-
someone who might want these?
-
>> I'll take them.
>> Charlsie: Tee shirt?
-
>> I'll take them.
-
>> Charlsie: Any chance
you want a pair of Levi's?
-
>> Sure, size 6, me.
-
>> Charlsie: Awesome!
>> Awesome.
-
>> Charlsie: There you go
and they won't go
-
to landfill this way.
-
>> No.
-
>> Charlsie: Maybe there is
no perfect solution to this
-
complicated problem.
-
But if there's something I've
learned throughout this process,
-
it's that there is
something I can do and,
-
for me, that will
mean buying less.
-
[ ♪♪ ]
-
>> Announcer: A special, year
long Marketplace investigation.
-
We go undercover,
inside nursing homes.
-
>> I was...
-
>> Announcer: Families
fighting for better care.
-
>> Die, die...
-
>> Woman: My poor mother.
-
>> Announcer: Has long term care
reached a crisis point?
-
>> Oh, we're
way past that.
-
I think we've been
in crisis for years.
-
>> If this happened
in a day care,
-
that day care would be
shut down in five minutes.
-
>> Announcer:
How to fight for better care,
-
On the next Marketplace.