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in General Factchecking by Newbie (220 points)

The fast fashion chain is directly linked to environmental pollution due to the use of material and immediate disposal. The extensive resource extraction is also a definitive issue. A huge issue with fast fashion is the massive use of water and the waste water that particularly is used with the making of textiles. The industry produces 92 million tonnes of waste a year. And beyond just waste water, the industry also has a huge impact on CO2 emissions. 

https://www.nature.com/articles/s43017-020-0039-9

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by Newbie (300 points)

It is true that fast fashion is bad for the environment. A primary source that I found was an article the explained and broke down the numbers of how fast fashion is hurting the environment: Rethinking Fast Fashion: The Environmental Cost of Cheap Clothes - Frost & Sullivan Institute This supports the original claim about fast fashion being bad for the environment.  Another source was a government website: Fast Fashion—Great for Your Wallet, Costly for the Planet | U.S. GAO. This even further supports the claim because government websites are considered to be one of the most reliable.
 

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by Newbie (300 points)

After lots of research, this claim seems to be fully true. Producing fast fashion clothing requires large amounts of water, energy, and chemicals, and many of these clothes end up in landfills after only a few wears. Evidence supporting this claim includes research showing that the fashion industry is one of the world’s largest polluters, contributing significantly to greenhouse gas emissions and water contamination from dyes and synthetic fibers. Fast fashion also relies heavily on synthetic materials like polyester, which shed microplastics into waterways. The overall fast fashion system prioritizes speed and low cost over environmental sustainability, reinforcing the claim that it has a harmful environmental impact.

https://www.economicsobservatory.com/how-does-fast-fashion-affect-the-environment

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6307129/

https://sustain.ucla.edu/2024/02/16/the-fast-fashion-epidemic/

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by Newbie (310 points)

This claim that fast fashion contributes a huge amount of pollution and harms the environment is true. 

According to an analysis from Business Insider, production of fast fashion adds 10% of the total global carbon emissions. With 85% of textiles going to dumps each year, and 500,000 microfibers being dumped into the ocean each year, fast fashion being dumped is worth the same as 50 billion plastic bottles.

Earth.Org Global Commons. (2026, February 3). The environmental impact of fast fashion, explained. Earth.Org. https://earth.org/fast-fashions-detrimental-effect-on-the-environment/

Not only does fast fashion cause pollution, but it also causes global warming. The decomposition process of dumped clothing releases methane. Methane, along with other harmful pollutants that are brought into the atmosphere, contribute to global warming. Clothing items that are being dumped take decades or centuries to decompose, making the amount stack up over time.

The Institute for Environmental Research and Education. (2025, June 30). Why is fast fashion bad for the environment? IERE. https://iere.org/why-is-fast-fashion-bad-for-the-environment/

Finally, the amount of water that is used to make the clothing is extremely high. It takes 2,700 liters of water to make one shirt made out of cotton. That is equivalent to around what one person drinks in two and a half years. This is harmful to the environment because valuable fresh water does not go where it is needed, but it is instead used to create more clothes, which become waste very quickly. 

Stawarz, S. (2025, August 4). The hidden cost of fast fashion: A threat to land and water conservation. The Conservation Foundation. https://theconservationfoundation.org/the-cost-of-fast-fashion/

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by Novice (610 points)

This claim is true. Fast fashion still has a large environmental impact despite efforts to make the fashion industry more sustainable and ethical. My source is a secondary source that analyzes multiple primary reports. It's from Earth.org, which is an environmental media organization. This source uses credible studies and published information from the United Nations to communicate with its audiences. This article analyzes the effects of the fast fashion industry, reiterating the claim that fast fashion negatively affects our water. This source also pointed out the effects of microplastics and energy use. Here are quotes and evidence I found support this claim: 

- "According to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, emissions from textile manufacturing alone are projected to skyrocket by 60% by 2030." 

- "The fashion industry is the second-largest consumer of water among industries, requiring about 700 gallons to produce one cotton shirt and 2,000 gallons of water to produce a pair of jeans." 

- " 2017 report from the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) estimated that 35% of all microplastics – tiny pieces of non-biodegradable plastic – found in the ocean come from the laundering of synthetic textiles like polyester."

I could not find evidence that supports this claim being false. 

Source- https://earth.org/fast-fashions-detrimental-effect-on-the-environment/ 

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ago by Newbie (330 points)
This claim is true. When looking into the fast fashion industry the cheap prices come at the cost of our environment. The fast production of clothing and clothing sales doubling each year, leads to more clothes ending up in landfill. A quote that helps describe this was "the consumption is going up, the wearing is decreasing, and disposal is increasing" (UPenn). To grow the cotton most of the clothes are made of, it leads to using large amounts of water and therefore degrades the land. On top of this to dye clothing they use chemical treatments which later causes pollution after it inevitably ends in landfill. Even if a fast fashion company claims they use recycled materials, these materials tend to shed more microplastics which drops the quality of the item, resulting in a shorter life span of usage. 94% of the United States tap water is invested with microplastics which can cause digestive issues, reproductive health problems, and respiratory harm. On top of this the fashion industry is responsible for 10% of total global CO2 emissions and is one of the top leading factors to landfill dumping.

Sources:

https://environment.upenn.edu/news-events/news/fast-fashion

https://earth.org/fast-fashions-detrimental-effect-on-the-environment/
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ago by Newbie (340 points)
edited ago by

This claim is true. This claim came from Nature, one of the world's most reputable and highly cited scientific journals. The authors of this article, titled "The environmental price of fast fashion," are certified researchers and professors who specialize in sustainability and economics, making them credible authors with little bias. 

This article was published in 2020, so to expand this argument, I found a more recent primary source by Earth ORG, a non-profit environmental news and data platform. The article is titled "The Environmental Impact of Fast Fashion, Explained" and was published in February 2026. The article directly quoted a Quantis International 2018 report, which found that "the three main drivers of the industry’s global pollution impacts are dyeing and finishing (36%), yarn preparation (28%) and fiber production (15%)." They go on to argue that the industry dries up water resources and pollutes rivers and streams, while 85% of all textiles go to dumps each year. Even washing clothes releases 500,000 tons of microfibers into the ocean each year, the equivalent of 50 billion plastic bottles. They go on to share the shocking stat that this issue is only on the rise and will continue to project to 60% emissions from textile manufacturing alone, according to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. This data directly aligns with Nature's claims, making this a true statement that fast fashion is negatively farming our environment through carbon emissions, polluting oceans, and overall waste production.

For a secondary source, the Center for Biological Diversity published an online newspaper article on fast fashion titled "At What Cost? Unravelling the Harms of the Fast Fashion Industry."  The Center for Biological Diversity is a highly credible non-profit (earning a four-star rating from the American Institute of Philanthropy) for using legal, scientific, and strategic actions to protect and educate the world about environmental concerns. They argue that: "the fast fashion industry is a significant contributor to the climate crisis, responsible for as much as 10% of global carbon dioxide emissions." They go on to elaborate fast fashion and not the entire fashion industry are at the forefront of this issue because they are designing thousands of new products weekly, often in current trends and cheap material made to be cheap but ultimately disposed of quickly.

For these three sources, their claims all align. Potential biases are minimal as all claims are scientifically backed and from reputable sources and highly credited authors. There are very few ways to contact these larger associations to ask specific questions, so no attempts were made.


https://www.nature.com/articles/s43017-020-0039-9

https://www.nature.com/natrevearthenviron/journal-information

https://earth.org/fast-fashions-detrimental-effect-on-the-environment/

https://www.carbontrust.com/sites/default/files/documents/resource/public/International%20Carbon%20Flows%20-%20Clothing%20-%20REPORT.pdf

https://www.biologicaldiversity.org/programs/population_and_sustainability/sustainability/fast_fashion

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ago by Newbie (310 points)

The claim that fast fashion is bad for the environment is true. In the peer-reviewed article written by Kirsi Niinimäk, Greg Peters, Helena Dahlbo, Patsy Perry, Timo Rissanen & Alison Gwilt, which focuses on the industry's water use, chemical pollution, CO2 emissions, and waste. It claims that "Current fashion-consumption practices result in large amounts of textile waste, most of which is incinerated, landfilled or exported to developing countries," which provides evidence that fast fashion has a direct impact on developing countries in terms of the environment.  https://www.nature.com/articles/s43017-020-0039-9

A research article entitled "Appalling or Advantageous? Exploring the Impacts from Environmental, Social, and Economic Perspectives," which claims that the fast fashion industry has "excessive water usage and pollution, plastic microfibers in the ocean, and carbon emissions. This further corroborates the initial claim made that the fast fashion industry is bad for the environment. Furthermore, the fast fashion industry also has adverse affects in the labor industry due to the mistreatment of workers. In that way, the environment isn't the only thing affected by the adverse effects of the fast fashion industry.https://jgbc.scholasticahq.com/article/36873-appalling-or-advantageous-exploring-the-impacts-of-fast-fashion-from-environmental-social-and-economic-perspectives

In this review chapter entitled "The Social and Environmental Impact of Fast Fashion," it claims that "Using synthetic fibres, releases harmful chemicals into waterways, damaging ecosystems." This corroborates the original article that fast fashion impacts the environment. Furthermore, the chapter goes on to say that the manufacturing process of fast fashion produces greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming, which harms the environment.   https://www.researchgate.net/publication/390862344_The_Social_and_Environmental_Impact_of_Fast_Fashion

The original article " The Environmental Price of Fast Fashion" was published in "Nature Reviews Earth & Environment" and is a peer-reviewed review of the effects fast fashion has on the environment. The article provides references that maintain its claim that fast fashion has adverse effects on the environment. 

Overall, the fast fashion industry causes adverse effects on the environment, such as the overuse of water, chemical pollution, and greenhouse gas emissions that are directly linked to global warming. 

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ago by Newbie (260 points)

Summary: The claim that fast fashion contributes significantly to environmental pollution is largely supported by scientific research. The article from Nature Reviews Earth & Environment summarizes data showing that the global fashion industry consumes enormous amounts of water, generates tens of millions of tons of textile waste each year, and contributes significantly to greenhouse gas emissions. When tracing the data further, much of the evidence comes from reports and life-cycle analyses conducted by organizations such as the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), and peer-reviewed environmental science research. While the exact numbers sometimes vary depending on methodology, the overall conclusion across multiple credible sources is consistent: the fashion industry has a large environmental footprint, particularly due to fast fashion’s rapid production cycles and disposal patterns.

Sources:

Nature Reviews Earth & Environment https://www.nature.com/articles/s43017-020-0039-9

A New Textiles Economy: Redesigning Fashion’s Future https://ellenmacarthurfoundation.org/a-new-textiles-economy

United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) https://www.unep.org/news-and-stories/story/putting-brakes-fast-fashion

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ago by Novice (570 points)

Fast fashion (the rapid design and production of cheap clothing) is bad for the environment. According to earth.org, fashion production accounts for 10% of total global carbon emissions. "The industry dries up water resources and pollutes rivers and streams, while 85% of all textiles go to dumps each year. Even washing clothes releases 500,000 tons of microfibers into the ocean each year, the equivalent of 50 billion plastic bottles".

The fashion industry is the second-largest consumer of water among all industries. Producing just one pair of jeans requires thousands of gallons of water. Also, synthetic fibers like polyester, nylon, and acrylic take hundreds of years to biodegrade. Not to mention, the process of making plastic fibers into textiles is extremely energy-intensive and requires large amounts of petroleum. All of these aspects of clothing making are detrimental to the environment.

A primary source with more information to back this up is the Quantis International 2018 report. The report found that the three main pollution contributors in fast fashion are dyeing and finishing (36%), yarn preparation (28%) and fiber production (15%). These processes have a severe impact on groundwater, ecosystems, and resource depletion.

Also, according to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, "emissions from textile manufacturing alone are projected to skyrocket by 60% by 2030."

There are no potential biases in this information because it is all based off of real studies that were performed by researchers which are primary sources. It is all factual, scientific evidence.

Sources: 

https://earth.org/fast-fashions-detrimental-effect-on-the-environment/ - *the Quantis International report is inside this link.

https://davidsuzuki.org/living-green/the-environmental-cost-of-fast-fashion/

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