Business Standard

Superbacte­ria could soon be eating China’s factory waste

- BLOOMBERG

In a Hong Kong laboratory, researcher­s are working with one of the world’s biggest cloth makers to improve its production process using a special ingredient: bacteria.

TAL Apparel, which has factories in mainland China and Southeast Asia, has teamed up with City University to identify bacteria that can clean up more efficientl­y the vast quantities of waste water the textile industry produces. It’s one of hundreds of efforts by China’s private and state-owned companies to fix a problem that could end up rewriting the playbook of the global fashion industry. After decades of almost unbridled industrial growth that left China with a legacy of rampant pollution, shrinking aquifers and soaring water prices, the government is cracking down on big industrial users, and the textile industry is in the front line. Cloth-making ranks third in China for the amount of waste water it discharges — 3 billion tonnes a year — after chemicals and paper, according to a 2015 report by New York-based non-profit group Natural Resources Defense Council, which has an office in Beijing.

The price of ensuring a sustainabl­e water supply in China is yet another expense for factories that are already being squeezed by higher land and labour costs. And while automation and overseas production offer some respite, China’s companies are turning to other technologi­es to preserve operating margins that, even for major players such as Crystal Internatio­nal Group, can be less than 10 percent. In 2015, the government released its Water Ten Plan, ushering in stricter waste-water regulation­s. It sets out 10 general measures to control pollution discharge, promote technology and strengthen water management, with a 2020 deadline to meet its goals. The stricter water rules are part of China’s actions to increase enforcemen­t in environmen­tal measures. Penalties for environmen­tal violations by the country’s manufactur­ers rose 34 percent in 2015, from the previous year, according to China Water Risk, a Hong Kong-based non-profit organisati­on focusing on disclosing risks related to China’s water resources.

The clean-up goes to the heart of an industry that leveraged decades of cheap labour and capital, and a unique close-knit supply chain of cloth, dyeing, sewing, fasteners, trimmings, labels and logistics, to deliver so-called fast fashion — rapidly shifting style from the catwalk to the mass market at prices that make garments almost a disposable commodity. “Customers are happy because clothes are even cheaper than a decade ago, and retailers can benefit from low costs,” said Felix Chung, a Hong Kong legislator representi­ng the textile industry. “But the result is massive waste — and the brands will need to pay for it in the future.”

 ??  ?? The superbacte­ria can clean up more efficientl­y the vast quantities of waste water the textile industry produces in China
The superbacte­ria can clean up more efficientl­y the vast quantities of waste water the textile industry produces in China

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