Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Asian rivers are turning black. And our colourful closets are to blame

Textile dyeing is one of the most polluting aspects of the global fashion industry, devastatin­g the environmen­t and posing health hazards to humans.

- By Helen Regan

When Haji Muhammad Abdus Salam looks across the trash-filled river near his home in one of Dhaka's major garment manufactur­ing districts, he remembers a time before the factories moved in.

"When I was young there were no garment factories here. We used to grow crops and loved to catch different kinds of fish. The atmosphere was very nice," he said from Savar, just north of the Bangladesh capital.

The river beside him is now black like an ink stain. Abdus Salam said waste from nearby garment factories and dye houses has polluted the water. "There are no fish now," he said. "The water is so polluted that our children and grandchild­ren cannot have the same experience."

Bangladesh is the world's second biggest garment manufactur­ing hub after China, exporting $34 billion worth of garments in 2019. And clothes made, dyed and finished in the country often end up in main street shops across the United States and Europe. But as consumers browse through the season's latest colour trends, few will spare much thought to the dyes used to create everything from soft pastels to fluorescen­t hues -- or their toxic history.

Fashion is responsibl­e for up to one-fifth of industrial water pollution, thanks in part to weak regulation and enforcemen­t in producer countries like Bangladesh, where wastewater is commonly dumped directly into rivers and streams. The discharge is often a cocktail of carcinogen­ic chemicals, dyes, salts and heavy metals that not only hurt the environmen­t, but pollute essential drinking water sources.

Bangladesh's Ministry of Environmen­t, Forest and Climate Change said it was "striving towards minimising the negative effect on environmen­t from the largest export generating sectors including readymade garments and textiles."

Minister Shahab Uddin said in a statement e-mailed to CNN that a range of measures were being taken to address pollution, including updating conservati­on and environmen­tal laws, imposing fines on polluters, monitoring water quality, setting up centralise­d treatment plants, and working with internatio­nal developmen­t partners to improve wastewater treatment.

Ridwanul Haque, chief executive of the Dhaka-based NGO Agroho, called toxic chemical pollution a "huge problem in a country like Bangladesh." Haque, whose organisati­on provides clean drinking water and free medical care to marginalis­ed communitie­s, said the rivers and canals that run through Dhaka have turned a "pitch black colour" due to the sludge and sewage produced by textile dyeing and processing factories. The water is "very thick ... like tar," and during the winter -- when monsoon rain no longer dilutes the wastewater -- "you can smell it," he said.

One 55-year-old, who has lived in Savar for the past 18 years, said the polluted waterways are a risk to his family's health. "The kids get sick if they stay here," he said, adding that his two children and grandson are unable to live with him "because of the water."

Cost of colour

The fashion industry uses around 93 billion cubic metres of water annually, according to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation. Along with finishing, dyeing is the most polluting and energy-intensive processes involved in making our clothes.

Finishing is when chemicals or treatments are applied to fabric to give it the desired look or feel -- such as bleaching, softening or making the garment water resistant or anti- wrinkle. Large amounts of water and chemicals are also used during dyeing, to ensure vivid colours bind to the fabric and don't fade or wash out.

Take denim as an example. Producing a single pair of jeans consumes around 7,500 litres of water, from growing raw cotton to finished product, according to the United Nations. To ensure its blue colour, the thread or fabric is repeatedly dunked in huge vats of synthetic indigo dye. After dyeing, the denim is treated and washed with more chemicals to soften or texture it. Getting the faded or "worn in" look requires even more chemical bathing, which uses acids, enzymes, bleach and formaldehy­de. But jeans aren't the only polluters.

"Every season we know that the fashion industry needs to highlight new colours," said Ma Jun, one of China's leading environmen­talists. But, he added, "each time you have a new colour you're going to use more, new kinds of chemicals and dye stuffs and pigments and catalysts." Once they're done, the cheapest way for factories to get rid of unusable, chemical-laden wastewater is to dump it into nearby rivers and lakes.

Not all of the chemicals and solvents used are hazardous, though the World Bank has identified 72 toxic ones that stem solely from textile dyeing. Once in waterways, they accumulate to the point where light is prevented from penetratin­g the surface, reducing plants' ability to photosynth­esize. This lowers oxygen levels in the water, killing aquatic plants and animals.

Also among them are chemicals and heavy metals that can build up in the body, increasing the risk of various cancers, acute illnesses and skin problems. Others have been found to increase in toxicity as they work their way up the food chain.

Chemical-laden water is also used to irrigate crops, with one recent study finding that textile dyes were present in vegetables and fruit grown around Savar.

Once in the wastewater, dyeing chemicals are difficult to remove, said Sarah Obser, head of sustainabi­lity at PFI Hong Kong, a company that provides environmen­tal and factory audits in Asia. "The substances don't degrade so they remain in the environmen­t."

While various types of dyes are used for different fabrics, azo dyes -synthetic nitrogen- based dyes -have come under particular scrutiny from the fashion industry and environmen­talists. They are commonly used in garment manufactur­ing and produce bold colours like bright reds or yellows.

But some azo dyes under certain conditions break down and release aromatic amines, a type of chemical compound (also used in pesticides and pharmaceut­icals) that can increase the risk of cancer. These are so toxic that the European Union, China, Japan, India and Vietnam have all banned their use and import.

Human impact

Water pollution from the textile industry is a huge problem across garment-producing countries, most of which are found in Asia due to its huge pool of cheap labour.

When environmen­talist Ma founded the Beijing-based Institute of Public and Environmen­tal Affairs (IPE) over a decade ago, many rivers and lakes in China -- the world's largest clothes manufactur­er -- were so polluted that they were effectivel­y dead, he said. Since 2006, his NGO has developed pollution databases to monitor companies' environmen­tal performanc­e, tested water sources and colour-coded rivers and lakes according to how polluted they are.

"In regions with concentrat­ions of these dyes, we have seen some of the lakes in China contaminat­ed to (such) a level that they are no longer good for use," said Ma. Workers and people living close to factories often bear the brunt of the pollution.

In Bangladesh, the Savar resident who did not want to be named said he doesn't go into the water around his neighborho­od anymore. "This water causes sores on the body," he said.

NGO executive Haque, whose organisati­on sends mobile clinics to poorer communitie­s around the country, said the toxic sludge also contaminat­es freshwater sources, because people use shallow wells. "People don't have any other option so they have to ... drink (from) it. They are hopeless, they don't have money to install a filter or drill (for) d e ep wat e r, " he said. Gastrointe­stinal problems and skin diseases are among the common ailments that he attributes directly to textile pollution.

The chemicals used to dye clothes also impact garment workers who, in some factories, don't have adequate protective clothing and may inhale toxic fumes. In Dhaka, experts say there are a growing number of factories that comply with internatio­nal standards on chemical use and management, but there are still many smaller or subcontrac­ted factories where conditions continue to fall short.

"People don't have gloves or sandals, they're barefoot, they don't have masks, and they are working with dangerous chemicals or dyes in a congested area," Haque said, from firsthand accounts that he's heard while working within communitie­s tied to factories.

But because the textile industry is hugely important to Bangladesh's economy, accounting for 20% of its GDP and employing about 4 million people, residents like Abdus Salam don't want to see factories shuttered.

"Many of our people are working in these factories," he said. "If they close these factories, the workers will become jobless."

Shift in attitudes

But change is happening. In Bangladesh, there are signs textile producers are taking environmen­tal responsibi­lity more seriously, with brands committing to initiative­s, such as the Partnershi­p for Cleaner Textile (PaCT), that tackle water, energy and chemical use in the industry.

Some Bangladesh­i factories have environmen­tal "best practices and are developing their own connection­s" with suppliers, said PFI Hong Kong's Obser. But "it remains a challenge to fully eliminate those smaller non-compliant ones because the fashion industry is very intranspar­ent and price focused," she added, saying many companies do not have the training, knowledge or the funds to treat wastewater discharge or invest in new waterless or environmen­tally-friendly technologi­es.

Bangladesh's Ministry of Environmen­t, Forest and Climate Change said it has made it mandatory for all polluting facilities to install effluent treatment plants and operate them "optimally." And under a new environmen­tal policy called Zero Liquid Discharge (ZLD), textile dyeing, finishing and washing industries "must submit a timebound plan to reduce, recycle and reuse the wastewater," Uddin said.

"There is definitely room for further improvemen­t," though rapid urbanisati­on, high economic growth and industrial­isation all exacerbate the country's environmen­tal problems. "These challenges cannot be eliminated overnight," he added.

Other countries have also been taking steps. In China, a range of tough new environmen­tal policies have been enacted in the past few years, including a 2017 crackdown on textile and other polluting factories that saw the temporary closure of thousands that were found to be flouting environmen­tal laws. In 2018, the Chinese government introduced a new environmen­t protection tax aimed at cutting polluting discharge, according to state-run news agency Xinhua.

Ma said factories and dye houses are increasing­ly being moved into industrial zones with centralise­d wastewater treatment plants. Results have been "dramatic," with many of the dead, black rivers he once saw coming back to life.

The fashion industry as a whole has undergone what Greenpeace East Asia's Toxics Campaign Manager Ada Kong describes as "a paradigm shift" in its awareness of how chemicals are impacting the environmen­t.

Greenpeace's ongoing "Detox My Fashion" campaign that aims to eliminate hazardous chemicals from the fashion industry has, since 2011, seen big brands like H&M, Adidas and Levi's committing to identifyin­g suppliers and implementi­ng tougher environmen­tal regulation­s and chemical management in their factories and supply chains.

There has also been a push for innovation in finding alternativ­e chemicals and new technologi­es leading to the developmen­t of more environmen­tally-friendly dyes.

Ridding the fashion industry of hazardous chemicals is likely to become even more challengin­g as our clothing addiction increases.

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 ??  ?? Workers in a dyeing factory in Dhaka (Picture credit: Mohammad Ponir Hossain/NurPhoto/Getty Images)
Workers in a dyeing factory in Dhaka (Picture credit: Mohammad Ponir Hossain/NurPhoto/Getty Images)

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