next
previous
items

Plastic in textiles: towards a circular economy for synthetic textiles in Europe

Publication Created 29 Jan 2021 Published 29 Jan 2021
Plastic-based — or ‘synthetic’— textiles are woven into our daily lives in Europe. They are in the clothes we wear, the towels we use and the bed sheets we sleep in. They are in the carpets, curtains and cushions we decorate our homes and offices with. And they are in safety belts, and car tyres, workwear and sportswear. Synthetic textile fibres are produced from fossil fuel resources, such as oil and natural gas. Their production, consumption and related waste handling generate greenhouse gas emissions, use non-renewable resources and can release microplastics. This briefing provides an overview of the synthetic textile economy in Europe, analyses environmental and climate impacts, and highlights the potential for developing a circular economy value chain.
Warning
The default page for this folder is also a folder. To add items to it, visit the default page's folder contents view and use the add menu.
Up one level
All 1 items in this folder are selected. Clear selection
   Title   Size   Modified   State 
Briefing Octet Stream Plastic in textiles: towards a circular economy for synthetic textiles in Europe 1 KB 11 Dec 2024, 11:32 AM Published