The New York Post recently published an article about a Chilean desert showing 39,000 pounds of scrapped clothing. Chile receives 59,000 tons annually. The photographs made me sick, for several reasons. The litter was scattered throughout the desert floor, and it looked like a bomb went off. When one considers the places that clothing could have been sent to, and what a wasteful society we’ve become, it’s senseless.
There are many companies who, rather than donate, dispose of perfectly useable goods. Their claim is that it’s more cost effective. The bottom-line is what many of these companies consider that their only goal. We say there are other options.
As a transfer station, we process up to 1,000 tons of waste each day. We understand that there is textile and clothing waste that absolutely cannot be salvaged due to environmental or contamination issues. However, we ask forward-thinking organizations to make solid decisions about what real waste looks like – and how to mitigate it.
Observing larger chain-store procedures, a great deal of clothing waste is shipped away from stores in shipping containers bound for disposal. What if we could divert some or all of the waste by using re-selling, or donating “good” (sometimes new with tags) products, and recycle even more?
Enter Fabscrap. They are a Brooklyn-based, non-profit textile reuse and recycle firm. Fabscrap opened a Mid-Atlantic hub in Philadelphia in November 2021. Initially, they worked with fashion and entertainment companies. They have now expanded to brands and stores in Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, DC, and southern New Jersey. According to the Philadelphia Inquirer, “the facility works with local recycling company, Retrievr, a residential textile collection company, to collect waste here. The 6,800 square-foot location houses 16 fabric sorting stations, a fabric re-sale shop and an area to showcase the work of one designer a month who uses recycled materials in their clothes.”
There are plenty of options to deal with clothing “waste.” Fabscrap and recyclers are one way to divert waste and maximize re-use. At Berks Transfer, we can move the product that needs to get to and from sorting stations. We also help with the disposal solutions for the product that actually “is” waste. Call us at 610-926-7626 X305, or email jcampbell@esreading.com to see how we can help your firm with its disposal and recycling needs.