The Guardian (USA)

Renting clothes is ‘less green than throwing them away’

- Priya Elan

A study has revealed that renting clothes, long touted as one of the “answers” to fashion’s sustainabi­lity crisis, is worse for the planet than throwing them away.

The study, published by the Finnish scientific journal Environmen­tal Research Letters assessed the environmen­tal impact of five different ways of owning and disposing of clothing, including renting, resale and recycling.

It found that renting clothes had the highest climate impact of all. The hidden environmen­tal cost was found to be delivery and packaging costs. Renting involves a large amount of transporta­tion, taking the clothes back and forth between the warehouse and the renter. Dry cleaning is also harmful to the environmen­t.

Renting clothes has been thought of the sustainabl­e and frugal alternativ­e to fast fashion, popularise­d by companies such as Rent the Runway and public figures like Carrie Symonds, who rented her wedding dress and her outfits for the G7 conference. Gwyneth Paltrow is on the Rent the Runway board and Ralph Lauren has announced a rental range.

The growing sector, which according to GlobalData it is going to be worth £2.3bn by 2029, has been touted as a possible solution to fashion’s environmen­tal crisis. A report by the World Economic Forum this year suggested that the industry generates 5% of global emissions.

However instead of solving fashion’s environmen­tal crisis, renting should be recategori­sed. “We should think of renting like second-hand shopping,” said Dana Thomas, author of Fashionopo­lis: The Price of Fast Fashion and the Future of Clothes. “[It’s] not something we do all the time, instead of buying our clothes and swapping out outfits nonstop, but on occasion, when the need arises, like proms [or] weddings.”

The study found many rental brands misuse the term “circular econ

omy” – the system where clothes are passed from person to person before being recycled – as a form of greenwashi­ng. “No executive wants to overhaul their business, and that’s what ‘going green’ will require, not tweaks but an entire overhaul,” said Thomas. “They are too focused on short-term gains to invest in long-term benefits.

“Only regulation will solve that problem. No company, in any industry, will volunteer to take a loss for the sake of the planet. They’ll do so when it’s the law. The biggest obstacle is greed.”

The new study suggests that if rental companies change their logistics to make them more climate friendly, renting would, environmen­tally, be on a level with reselling. It also found that the most sustainabl­e way to consume fashion is to buy fewer items and to wear them for as long as possible. “You want to be sustainabl­e? Buy less, buy better,” Thomas said.

 ??  ?? A woman looks at clothes at Rent the Runway, an online subscripti­on service for designer dresses and accessorie­s in New York. Photograph: Shannon Stapleton/Reuters
A woman looks at clothes at Rent the Runway, an online subscripti­on service for designer dresses and accessorie­s in New York. Photograph: Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

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