From The Straits Times    |

Photo: 123RF.com

Few shoppers at Swedish fast-fashion chain H&M notice the collection bin next to the cash counter, an inconspicuous receptacle for old and unwanted clothing. But this is slowly changing.

The retailer, with 12 bins spread across its 10 outlets in Singapore, collected 64 tonnes of unwanted garments last year – about three- fifths the weight of a blue whale. This is almost triple the amount collected in 2015 (22.71 tonnes) and more than five times that collected in 2014 (12.09 tonnes).

This year, H&M Singapore hopes to bag a record 88 tonnes, adding to the more than 40,000 tonnes of unwanted clothing it has amassed globally so far.

Everything collected is sold to the chain’s recycling partner, I:Collect (I:CO), for a fee, which is donated to H&M Foundation, a non-profit global organisation.

 

At I:CO’s processing plants in Germany, the United States and India, the clothing is sorted. About 55 per cent of it is resold in second- hand markets worldwide. The remainder is processed – chopped up into fabric shreds which are used as insulation material; or ground into finer fibres and made into cardboard and plastic tarp sheets; or spun with virgin cotton to create recycled yarn.

It is this yarn that H&M uses for its two eco-friendly clothing lines Close the Loop and Conscious, comprising products made of up to 20 per cent recycled materials.

The trend of more people donating their used clothes and more retailers accepting them seems to be growing.

 

American fashion brand Levi’s launched its recycling drive, where shoppers can drop off their unwanted garments and shoes, in 2015 nationwide in the US after a successful pilot programme in 2014.

The North Face, which started collecting unwanted garments and footwear in 2013 in North America, expanded its collection drive to Germany and Canada last year. So far, it has collected 19.3 tonnes of unwanted clothing and footwear in the US alone.

Fashion retail chain Forever 21 started its recycling efforts in San Francisco, California, in 2014.

I:CO works with about 60 retail partners in 65 countries, including Levi’s, The North Face and Forever 21. H&M is its biggest partner.

But recycling is more than just about reducing the amount of clothes headed for the dumpster.

Photo: H&M

Mr Olle Blidholm, H&M’s environmental sustainability manager, says that, from a business perspective, it makes sense to take care of social and environmental issues.

“To do good business long term, you need to take into account social and environmental responsibility in a more active way. You have to plan your business in line with what the planet can cope with,” he says.

This comes as the global fashion industry cottons on to the environmental impact that the apparel industry has on the planet.

Cotton production is a huge water guzzler. According to non-governmental organisation World Wide Fund, 20,000 litres of water are needed to produce just 1kg of cotton, equivalent to a T-shirt and a pair of jeans.

A report in October, by management consulting firm McKinsey & Company, estimated that if 80 per cent of the population of emerging economies reached the same clothing-consumption level as that of the Western world by 2025, carbon dioxide emissions would increase by 77 per cent to 3,030 million metric tons, up from 1,714 million metric tons in 2015.

 

 

Your sparkle will not go unnoticed! #HM

A photo posted by H&M (@hm) on

This increases the amount of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere, one of the key drivers of global warming.

Singapore Polytechnic senior retail lecturer Sarah Lim says the time is ripe for fashion retailers to position themselves as environmentally responsible and not just profit- driven.

“Shoppers care more than just about how they look. They want to be part of a larger movement and they care about the social responsibility behind the brands they buy,” she says, adding that by collecting old clothes, H&M lets customers participate in the greening process.

She adds: “This also helps the brand establish a green reputation, which helps to build loyalty among the millennials of tomorrow.”

Photo: Text by Alyssa Woo. Photos by Nivash Joyvin and I:Collect

According to a 2015 global report by research firm Nielsen, 72 per cent of Generation Z consumers – those aged between 15 and 20 – were willing to pay more for products and services from companies they viewed as committed to making a positive social and environmental impact.

This is up from 55 per cent the year before.

Over at H&M, the Conscious collection, launched in 2012, has been “well-received” here, according to the brand’s spokesman, who declined to disclose sales figures. The Close the Loop collection is not available in Singapore.

Mr Fredrik Famm, country manager for H&M South-east Asia, puts the popularity of its eco-lines down to reasonable pricing and the fact that the products are also fashionable.

Customers, he says, are also beginning to be more conscious and perceptive of the brands they consume.

“There’s an increase in awareness about sustainability and being socially responsible,” he says, adding that the conveniently placed garment-recycling bins at stores make it easy for people to go green.

For shopper Fabian Tan, H&M has given him an easy way to recycle his unwanted clothes.

The market researcher has been donating his unwanted garments to the retail chain since it started its collection drive in 2013.

The 29-year-old says he has donated about 150 items so far.

“A lot of people have the intention to do good and recycle, but when it becomes troublesome to do so, they don’t do it in the end.

“Retailers such as H&M make it easy for people to do the right thing.”

• The writer’s trip was sponsored by H&M.

The original version of this story was published in The Straits Times on February 1, 2017.