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Renting clothes may be worse for the environment?
Like recycling and reselling, renting clothes is one of the solutions proposed by the fashion industry to help reduce its impact on the planet. But is this model as green as it seems?
Perhaps not, according to a new study that notably singles out the greenhouse gas emissions generated by the increasingly popular clothing rental services.
Bad news for anyone who saw renting clothes as a way of doing something positive for the planet. In fact, in terms of environmental impact, this process could ultimately be worse than buying and then throwing away new clothing items. A Finnish study published in the scientific journal, Environmental Research Letters, concluded and reported on in The Guardian. The news comes when rental platforms are springing up around the world and when brands themselves are even launching such services. According to the research, renting clothes was found to have a higher climate impact than throwing them away.
The researchers analyzed the environmental impact — or, more precisely, the greenhouse gas emissions — of five different scenarios for textile “ownership” and “end-of-life,” including clothing rental, recycling, reselling, or wearing items for more or less time before throwing them away. It is something that has not previously been carried out.
The results may sound surprising, but renting clothes was found to have the highest climate impact, with the researchers concluding that this could be even worse than throwing out clothes after use. And it’s a surprising finding since these services are now often presented as an eco-conscious alternative to traditional shopping.
In particular, the study suggests that the round trips between renters and warehouses result in a large amount of transportation, which plays a key role in these results, driving up greenhouse gas emissions. Similarly, the dry cleaning of clothes also has a significant impact.
In the end, rental companies would have to transform their logistics to make such services more eco-friendly. The environmental impact of renting would then be on par with clothing resale, even if this doesn’t appear to be the most eco-friendly option either. In the end, the researchers conclude that the best solution remains to buy fewer clothing items and to wear them for as long as possible, before reselling or donating them.