H&M shouldn’t throw away brand new clothes

Almost a third of all clothes produced are never worn. Many unsold garments end up in landfills or incinerators. We’re calling on H&M to take the lead against this waste.

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Clothes should be made to last, not thrown away or burned if they aren’t sold fast enough.

But too many manufacturers are treating clothes less like your dependable old winter jacket, and more like disposable plastic bags or paper napkins.

Millions of perfectly good garments are being thrown away every year. That’s a colossal waste.

H&M produces billions of garments every year

H&M alone produces about 3 billion garments every year. You might think that no one could possibly sell that many clothes, and you’d be correct.

Globally, almost a third of clothes go unsold. In 2019, reporters revealed that mountains of perfectly good H&M garments were being thrown away, or even used as fuel for power plants.

All this waste comes at a real cost. Creating a single cotton t-shirt takes about 700 gallons of water, and that’s not even counting the energy being used to create and transport it.

Tell H&M: Don’t turn new clothes into more waste

H&M has an opportunity to set a new standard by taking a firm stance against clothing waste. If H&M started producing only clothes it was likely to sell, it would mean a new chapter in sustainable clothing production.

We think consumer action could go a long way with H&M. The company has already announced new recycling initiatives. But we’re still waiting to see whether the company can meet its sustainability goals.

The world has enough waste already. We don’t need to add an avalanche of disposable clothing to the pile.

Send a message to H&M: Don’t turn new clothes into more waste.

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