CO₂ Footprint
8 kg
Water Usage
2,700 L
دليل مفصل قريبًا
نعمل على إعداد دليل تعليمي شامل لـ Textile Carbon Footprint Calculator. عد قريبًا للاطلاع على الشروحات خطوة بخطوة والصيغ والأمثلة الواقعية ونصائح الخبراء.
The Textile Carbon Footprint calculator quantifies the environmental impact of clothing and fabric choices in terms of CO₂ equivalent emissions and water consumption throughout the full lifecycle of a garment — from raw material production through manufacturing, transportation, consumer use, and end-of-life disposal. Fashion and apparel is one of the most resource-intensive industries globally, responsible for approximately 10% of global carbon dioxide emissions and 20% of industrial water pollution. The environmental cost varies enormously by fiber type: conventional cotton requires 10,000–20,000 liters of water per kilogram and significant pesticide use; polyester is derived from petroleum and is non-biodegradable; wool generates methane from sheep; while innovative fibers like Tencel (lyocell), organic cotton, and recycled polyester have substantially lower footprints. The calculator uses lifecycle assessment (LCA) data to estimate the carbon footprint of a garment based on its fiber composition, weight, country of manufacture, expected lifespan, and end-of-life scenario. Understanding the carbon footprint of fashion choices empowers consumers to make more sustainable decisions: choosing organic cotton over conventional reduces pesticide load; selecting recycled polyester instead of virgin polyester cuts carbon emissions by 30–60%; buying secondhand eliminates production emissions entirely. The calculator also models the impact of care practices (washing frequency, water temperature, drying method) on lifetime garment emissions, since consumer care typically accounts for 20–35% of a garment's lifetime carbon footprint. Industry certifications like GOTS (Global Organic Textile Standard), bluesign, and Oeko-Tex provide verified environmental standards that consumers can use as purchasing guides.
Total CO₂e = Production CO₂e + Transport CO₂e + Care CO₂e (per wash × washes) + Disposal CO₂e | Water Use = Fiber Water Intensity (L/kg) × Garment Weight (kg) | Production CO₂e by fiber type × garment weight
- 1Step 1: Identify the fiber composition of the garment (cotton, polyester, wool, blend percentages).
- 2Step 2: Estimate the garment weight in kilograms (T-shirt ~0.2 kg; jeans ~0.7 kg; coat ~1.5 kg).
- 3Step 3: Look up production CO₂e per kg by fiber type from LCA databases.
- 4Step 4: Add transportation emissions based on manufacturing country and shipping mode.
- 5Step 5: Estimate lifetime care emissions: washes per year × lifespan years × CO₂e per wash.
- 6Step 6: Add disposal emissions (landfill) or subtract avoided emissions (donation/recycling).
- 7Step 7: Sum all phases for total lifetime CO₂e footprint.
Production of 0.2 kg cotton T-shirt generates ~2.1 kg CO₂e and uses 2,700 liters of water. Transport from Bangladesh adds 0.3 kg CO₂e. 156 washes at 0.03 kg CO₂e each (cold wash, tumble dry) add 4.7 kg. Landfill disposal adds 0.1 kg. Total: 7.2 kg CO₂e per T-shirt lifetime.
Recycled polyester production uses ~60% less energy than virgin polyester: 0.25 kg generates ~1.8 kg CO₂e vs ~4.5 kg for virgin. Water use is minimal (50 L vs 10,000+ for cotton). High wash frequency (100/year) contributes 4.0 kg CO₂e in care, but recycling at end-of-life avoids landfill methane.
A pair of jeans requires ~0.7 kg of denim fabric. Conventional cotton jeans generate 33.4 kg CO₂e lifetime vs 22.0 kg for organic cotton equivalent. Organic farming eliminates synthetic pesticides and fertilizers, cuts water use by 37%, and reduces soil contamination — at a small premium in retail price.
Buying secondhand avoids all production, dyeing, and new-manufacturing emissions. Only transportation of the secondhand item and any cleaning contributes to the carbon footprint. For a consumer buying 10 items per year, choosing secondhand for all of them saves 145 kg CO₂e — equivalent to driving ~370 miles in an average car.
Hot water washing generates 20x more CO₂e than cold washing because water heating dominates the energy use. Over 100 washes, the difference is 60 kg (hot) vs 3 kg (cold) CO₂e — a 57 kg lifetime saving per garment, equivalent to driving 145 miles in an average car. Cold washing also reduces fabric damage and dye fading.
Consumer carbon footprint auditing for clothing choices, representing an important application area for the Textile Carbon Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate textile carbon calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Fashion brand sustainability reporting and LCA, representing an important application area for the Textile Carbon Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate textile carbon calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Retailer sustainability communication to consumers, representing an important application area for the Textile Carbon Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate textile carbon calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Academic researchers and university faculty use the Textile Carbon Calc for empirical studies, thesis research, and peer-reviewed publications requiring rigorous quantitative textile carbon analysis across controlled experimental conditions and comparative studies
Eco-fashion design schools and curricula, representing an important application area for the Textile Carbon Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate textile carbon calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Blended Fabrics
In the Textile Carbon Calc, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting textile carbon results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when textile carbon calculations fall into non-standard territory.
Dye and Finishing Processes
In the Textile Carbon Calc, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting textile carbon results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when textile carbon calculations fall into non-standard territory.
End-of-Life Scenarios
In the Textile Carbon Calc, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting textile carbon results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when textile carbon calculations fall into non-standard territory.
| Fiber | CO₂e (kg/kg) | Water Use (L/kg) | Biodegradable | Renewable |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conventional Cotton | 5.9 | 10,000–20,000 | Yes | Yes |
| Organic Cotton | 3.0 | 2,600–7,000 | Yes | Yes |
| Virgin Polyester | 9.5 | 125 | No | No |
| Recycled Polyester | 3.8 | 50 | No | No (feedstock) |
| Wool (mulesing-free) | 36–80 | 50–100 | Yes | Yes |
| Tencel (Lyocell) | 2.8 | ~20 (closed loop) | Yes | Yes |
| Hemp | 1.5 | 300–500 | Yes | Yes |
| Nylon (virgin) | 7.9 | 140 | No | No |
| Linen (flax) | 1.3 | 500 (rainfed) | Yes | Yes |
Which fabric has the lowest carbon and water footprint?
Among common apparel fibers, recycled polyester and Tencel (lyocell) have among the lowest combined carbon and water footprints. Recycled polyester cuts emissions ~60% vs virgin polyester and requires minimal water. Tencel is produced in a closed-loop solvent process that recycles 99% of water and chemicals. Hemp requires very little water, no pesticides, and sequesters carbon in the soil. Linen (from flax) grown without irrigation is also low-impact. Organic cotton is significantly better than conventional cotton but still water-intensive. Conventional cotton and wool have among the highest impacts per kilogram.
What percentage of a garment's carbon footprint comes from consumer care?
Consumer care (washing, drying, ironing) accounts for approximately 20–35% of a garment's lifetime carbon footprint, depending on fiber type and care habits. For synthetic garments that dry quickly and need less ironing, care may account for only 15–20%. For cotton items that are frequently washed in hot water and tumble-dried, care emissions can exceed production emissions over a long garment life. This means the consumer phase is one of the most controllable parts of the fashion carbon footprint — choosing cold washing and air-drying has significant measurable impact.
Is polyester worse than natural fibers from a sustainability perspective?
Polyester has a lower carbon and water footprint per kilogram of fiber than conventional cotton, but introduces different environmental problems: it is derived from petroleum, is non-biodegradable, and sheds microplastics with every wash (up to 700,000 microplastic fibers per wash, which end up in waterways and oceans). Natural fibers biodegrade but have significant land, water, and chemical impacts during cultivation. The 'best' fiber depends on which environmental metric is prioritized. Recycled polyester addresses the petroleum derivation issue but not microplastic shedding. Innovative bio-based fibers (Tencel, Pinatex, mycelium leather) are addressing these tradeoffs.
How does garment lifespan affect total carbon footprint?
Extending garment lifespan is one of the most powerful levers for reducing fashion's carbon impact. The production phase dominates the carbon budget for most garments. If a garment lasts twice as long (through better quality, proper care, and repair), the production emissions are amortized over twice as many wears, effectively halving the carbon footprint per wear. The Ellen MacArthur Foundation found that extending average garment active life by just 9 months reduces carbon, water, and waste footprints by 20–30% each. Quality over quantity is both economically and environmentally superior.
What are textile certifications and how do they help consumers?
Textile certifications provide verified third-party standards for environmental and social claims. Key certifications include: GOTS (Global Organic Textile Standard) — covers entire organic fiber supply chain from growing to dyeing; OEKO-TEX Standard 100 — tests for harmful chemicals in finished textiles; bluesign — covers responsible use of resources in textile manufacturing including energy, water, and chemicals; Fair Trade — addresses social equity in supply chains; Cradle to Cradle — evaluates circular economy design. Look for these logos when purchasing apparel to verify environmental claims rather than relying on unregulated 'eco' marketing language.
How much CO₂ does the global fashion industry produce?
The global fashion industry produces approximately 2.1 billion tonnes of CO₂ equivalent per year, representing about 4–10% of global greenhouse gas emissions depending on measurement methodology. This is more than the aviation and shipping industries combined according to some estimates (though aviation is often cited more prominently). Fashion is also responsible for 20% of global industrial water pollution from dyeing and treatment processes. If growth continues at current rates, the industry's carbon share could reach 26% of global emissions by 2050 according to A New Textiles Economy report by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation.
Does buying local fashion significantly reduce carbon footprint?
Transportation accounts for 5–10% of a garment's total carbon footprint, making it less impactful than production and consumer care phases. Buying locally manufactured clothing does reduce transport emissions but typically does not dramatically change the total footprint unless the local production is also using sustainable practices, renewable energy, and lower-impact materials. The production phase (fiber growing, dyeing, finishing) dominates the carbon budget. That said, local manufacturing has significant social benefits (supporting local economies, enabling better quality oversight) even when the pure carbon savings are modest.
What is a microplastic filter and should I use one?
Microplastic filters are laundry bag inserts (like the Guppyfriend bag) or washing machine filters (like the Microplastic Filter by Tersano or PlanetCare) that capture synthetic microfibers before they exit the washing machine and enter waterways. Synthetic textiles (polyester, nylon, acrylic) shed 700,000+ microplastic fibers per wash cycle. These particles are too small for most water treatment plants to capture and have been found in oceans, freshwater, soil, and even human blood. Using a microplastic filter captures 25–86% of shed fibers depending on the product. For households with significant synthetic clothing, these filters are an important mitigation tool.
نصيحة احترافية
The single most impactful action you can take to reduce your fashion carbon footprint is to extend the life of garments you already own. Before any new purchase, ask whether you have a similar item that could be repaired, altered, or restyled instead.
هل تعلم؟
Producing one pair of conventional denim jeans requires approximately 7,000–10,000 liters of water — equivalent to 10 years of drinking water for one person. The Aral Sea, once one of the world's largest lakes, was significantly drained by cotton irrigation for the Soviet textile industry, leaving behind a salt desert.