In the Atacama desert, the toxic graveyard of disposable fashion

In the Atacama desert, the toxic graveyard of disposable fashion

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Colorful hills rise out of the desolate landscape. They are squads that grow as some 59,000 tons per year enter through the free zone of the port of Iquique, 1,800 km from Santiago.

The excessive and fleeting consumption of clothing, with chains capable of releasing more than 50 seasons of new products per year, has caused textile waste to grow exponentially in the world, which takes about 200 years to disintegrate.

This is clothing made in China or Bangladesh and bought in Berlin or Los Angeles, before being thrown away. At least 39,000 tons end up as garbage hidden in the desert in the Alto Hospicio area, in northern Chile, one of the final destinations for "second-hand" clothing or from past seasons of fast-fashion chains.

Chile is the leading importer of used clothing in Latin America. For nearly 40 years there has been a solid trade in "American clothing" in stores throughout the country, which are supplied with bundles purchased by the free zone in the north of the country from the United States, Canada, Europe and Asia.

"These clothes come from all over the world," Alex Carreño, a former worker in the import zone of the port of Iquique, who lives next to a clothing dump, told AFP.

In this area of ​​importers and preferential taxes, merchants from the rest of the country select the garments for their stores and what is left over cannot go through customs in this region of just over 300,000 inhabitants.

In the Atacama desert, the cemetery toxic waste of disposable fashion

"What was not sold to Santiago or went to other countries (such as Bolivia, Peru and Paraguay for smuggling), then stays here because it is a free zone," says Carreño.

On the desert landscape there are patches of all kinds of garbage, and much of it is from clothes, handbags and shoes. Ironically, rain or sky boots stand out in one of the most arid areas of the world.

A lady who doesn't want to give her name has half her body sunk in a pile of clothes and rummages around looking for the best possible ones to sell in her neighborhood.

Elsewhere, Sofía and Jenny, two young Venezuelans who crossed the border between Bolivia and Chile a few days ago, some 350 km from the dump, choose "things for the cold" while their babies crawl on textile mountains: "We come to look for clothes because we really don't have them, we threw them all away when we came backpacking here".

Toxic Fashion

Reports on the garment industry have exposed the high cost of fast fashion, with underpaid workers, allegations of child labor and deplorable conditions for mass production. Added to this today are devastating figures on its immense environmental impact, comparable to that of the oil industry.

According to a 2019 UN study, clothing production in the world doubled between 2000 and 2014, which has made it clear that it is an industry "responsible for 20% of the total waste of water worldwide global".

The same report indicates that only the production of jeans (jeans) requires 7,500 liters of water, highlights that the manufacture of clothing and footwear generates 8% of greenhouse gases, and that "every second it is buried or burns an amount of textiles equivalent to a garbage truck".

In the textile dumps of this Chilean desert it is possible to stumble upon an American flag, a pair of polished skirts, see a "wall" of pants with labels, and even step on a collection of sweaters with Christmas motifs so popular in December parties in London or New York.

"The problem is that clothing is not biodegradable and contains chemicals, which is why it is not accepted in municipal landfills," Franklin Zepeda, founder of EcoFibra, a circular economy firm with a production plant, told AFP in Alto Hospice of panels with thermal insulation based on this disposable clothing.

Underground there are more garments covered with the help of municipal trucks, in an attempt to prevent fires caused and very toxic by the chemicals and synthetic fabrics that compose it.

But clothing buried or exposed also releases pollutants into the air and into the groundwater tables typical of the desert ecosystem. Fashion is as toxic as tires or plastics.

© 2021 AFP

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