Santa Fe New Mexican

Problem with your sneakers could be they’re built to last too long

Companies begin to focus on developing plant-based soles that won’t leave plastics behind when they degrade

- By Daliah Singer

Thomas Bogle was logging dozens of miles on the spruce- and pine-lined backcountr­y trails that weaved around his home in Steamboat Springs, Colo., as he trained for an ultramarat­hon. His mind wasn’t focused on his target pace, though. Instead, he couldn’t stop thinking about the micro bits of plastic and rubber the soles of his shoes were shedding on the forest floor.

With every step we take, our shoes leave behind an invisible trail of toxic contaminan­ts that can potentiall­y harm the soil, water and animal health.

Nearly 24 billion pairs of shoes were produced in 2022. Each contains myriad plastics and synthetic, petroleum-based rubber. Of the 500,000 tons of microplast­ics that seep into the world’s oceans each year, up to 35% come from synthetic textiles, including footwear, according to one estimate, from the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature.

Footwear alone accounts for 1.4% of global greenhouse gas emissions, not that far below the airline industry, which is responsibl­e for around 2%.

Though shoe brands have taken strides toward sustainabi­lity, from offsetting carbon emissions to swapping out materials in the upper sections of shoes, they have largely overlooked soles. Now, a slew of companies are starting to focus underfoot by developing new plantbased soles that won’t leave plastics behind when they degrade.

Bogle, who spent eight years working in product developmen­t at a footwear company, is now working on an outsole from plant byproducts, while Keel Labs, a sustainabl­e materials company started by two fashion design students, is making soles out of seaweed-based fiber. Native Shoes has a line of slip-ons made from an algae-based material, and Unless, a plantbased streetwear company in Portland, Ore., rolled out a shoe made entirely of biodegrada­ble materials.

Shoes are designed “to last 1,000 years, and we use [them] for 100 days,” said Yuly Fuentes-Medel, program director of climate and textiles at Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

Americans alone toss out 300 million pairs of shoes every year. According to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, only about 13% of clothing and footwear is recycled in the United States.

That’s partly because of the complexity of the shoemaking process. The average sneaker is composed of more than 130 individual pieces, according to Fuentes-Medel, who recently helped create the Footwear Manifesto, a report on how to make the industry more sustainabl­e. Manufactur­ing a pair requires at least 100 steps on average, including stitching and gluing, she said. That makes it nearly impossible to recycle them or take them apart to reuse their materials.

The plastics in shoes also pose problems while consumers are wearing them. A 2022 study in the Journal of Hazardous Materials suggests abraded plastic from shoe soles reduces soil’s capacity to hold water and impedes photosynth­esis. Another study, published in Science of the Total Environmen­t, attributed mass coho salmon die-offs to 6PPD, a chemical added during tire manufactur­ing that is also found in footwear.

Plant-based soles address some of these issues: They won’t shed plastic into the environmen­t and making them generates fewer carbon emissions and takes fewer toxic chemicals. But shoes made with natural materials face some of the same challenges as their plastic counterpar­ts once they’re discarded. Taking the shoes apart is still hard and recycling them will require setting up new infrastruc­ture.

The more consumers ask for these products, Fuentes-Medel said, the more likely that infrastruc­ture will come online, eventually leading to a more sustainabl­e shoe industry. “You don’t want to consider your shoe something you’re going to throw away, and that’s a long-term change,” she said. “It’s a mental model that needs to change for us to keep building all the products of the future.”

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