How thrift (OK) clothes pollute ecosystem

By Nneka Nwogwugwu

Thrifting means to go shopping at a thrift store, garage sale, or flea market where you’ll find gently used items such as clothes, books, and furniture at discounted prices.

A report by Deutsch Welle correspondent has observed that each week, Ghana receives 15 million items of used clothing sent from the West.

But 40% of the products get discarded due to poor quality. They end up at landfills and in bodies of water, polluting entire ecosystems.

The Kantamanto market in Ghana’s capital Accra is West Africa’s hub for used clothing from the West.

Here, traders hastily sort through piles of clothes daily in order to grab the best bargain. But often, there are more rags than riches.

“We didn’t get any good clothing at all,” a trader told DW after one of these hasty routines.

Recently, the deliveries from the West have increasingly been focused on so-called fast fashion items. These clothes usually wear out after only a few weeks. To some traders, it is actually an imposition to sift through the.

“The goods that are coming now are really affecting our business,” another trader said, stressing that such cheap items cannot be resold in the local market.

While most of these second-hand clothes are typically donated with good intentions from industrialized countries, many have now become an environmental hazard in Ghana and beyond.

The OR Foundation, and NGO from the United States, has estimated that about 15 million individual items of used clothing now arrive in Ghana weekly, while 40% end up discarded due to poor quality. With no use for them, the discarded clothing items first end up at landfills and then travel further into the ocean.

Environmental activists say this is a major catastrophe in the making; groups like the Ghana Water and Sanitation Journalists Network (GWJN), are trying to raise awareness about this underreported issue.

“Because it is second-hand clothing, some of them wear out very quickly, and then they get thrown all over the place. You get to (the) refuse dump, and you find a lot of them dumped over there,” Justice Adoboe, the national coordinator of the organization, told DW.

“You go even near water bodies, you realize that as rainfalls and erosion happen, (they carry) a lot of these second hand clothing wastes towards our water bodies,” Adoboe added, highlighting that because some of the items include toxic dyes, “those who drink from these bodies (of water) downstream might not be drinking just water but chemicals.”

Furthermore, the discarded clothing items that are flushed into the sea later get washed back up on the country’s beaches. For UN Goodwill Ambassador Roberta Annan, this is a disaster in the making for marine life:

“You can’t take it out. You have to dig. It’s buried. It’s stuck. Some of these clothes are polyester and, I would say, synthetic fabrics that also go into the waterway and choke the fish and marine life in there,” Annan told DW, as she tried to pull some of the clothing out at beach in Accra.

Meanwhile, some fashion designers are looking into finding alternative solutions to this growing problem.

Elisha Ofori Bamfo in an interview with Deutsch Wella said she focuses on upcycling discarded secondhand clothes. But even he is not happy with the quality of some of the clothes he found in recent times.

Bamfo told DW that it is even difficult to upcycle and recycle some of the second hand clothes that are imported into the country these days.

“Sometimes when you go to the market, there are some clothes that can’t be upcycled or can’t be sold,” Bamfo said, adding that local authorities have to take the lead and ensure that only quality second-hand clothing items are imported.

Ecosystem
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