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Sustainable Textile Innovation: Biodegradable Fabrics and Their Role in Climate Action

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) 2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sekinat Oyefeso

Summary

This review argues that synthetic textile fibers are a major source of microplastic pollution and that a shift to biodegradable fabrics represents both an environmental necessity and an opportunity to fundamentally redesign how clothing is produced and consumed.

Study Type Environmental

Fashion has long been a mirror reflecting human creativity and cultural evolution. Yet behind its glamour lies an inconvenient truth: the global textile industry is one of the largest polluters on the planet. From the chemical-laden dyeing processes to the synthetic fibers shedding microplastics into our oceans, every stage of garment production leaves a heavy environmental footprint. As climate change accelerates, the industry’s responsibility to reinvent itself has become impossible to ignore. The call for sustainable textile innovation isn’t just a trend—it’s an imperative. Every year, more than 92 million tons of textile waste are generated worldwide, and an estimated 87% of clothing ends up in landfills or incinerators. The reliance on synthetic materials like polyester—a derivative of fossil fuels—means that much of this waste persists for centuries. The environmental cost extends further: textile dyeing is responsible for 20% of global industrial water pollution, and cotton farming consumes massive amounts of freshwater, contributing to water scarcity in already vulnerable regions. In this context, biodegradable fabrics have emerged as one of the most promising solutions. Unlike synthetics that linger indefinitely, biodegradable materials are designed to return safely to the earth, completing a natural cycle that aligns with the principles of circularity and climate resilience. But this innovation isn’t just about materials—it represents a fundamental shift in how we think about consumption, waste, and responsibility.

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